Sustainable Poverty Reduction in Less-favoured AreasRuerd Ruben, J. Pender, Arie Kuyvenhoven CABI, 2007 - 472 pages Printbegrænsninger: Der kan printes 10 sider ad gangen og max. 40 sider pr. session |
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Page 2
... households' investments in improved and sustainable natural resource ... farm-household and village level, looking for a portfolio of activities and ... households may be required to guarantee both higher factor returns and improved land ...
... households' investments in improved and sustainable natural resource ... farm-household and village level, looking for a portfolio of activities and ... households may be required to guarantee both higher factor returns and improved land ...
Page 13
... farm-household and village levels, looking for a portfolio of activities and technologies that guarantee input efficiency and labour productivity. Major characteristics and typical constraints of each of these LFA farming systems can be ...
... farm-household and village levels, looking for a portfolio of activities and technologies that guarantee input efficiency and labour productivity. Major characteristics and typical constraints of each of these LFA farming systems can be ...
Page 29
... households are prevented by a cultural taboo from using oxen, which limits their ability to farm, and often results in such households sharecropping out their land (Benin, 2006; Pender and Gebremedhin, 2006; Tesfaye, Chapter 7, this ...
... households are prevented by a cultural taboo from using oxen, which limits their ability to farm, and often results in such households sharecropping out their land (Benin, 2006; Pender and Gebremedhin, 2006; Tesfaye, Chapter 7, this ...
Page 34
... farm household to become non-separable. Households satisfy their own consumption needs first before considering allocating resources to highvalue cash crops, the price of which can bear high transaction cost. Risk in those circumstances ...
... farm household to become non-separable. Households satisfy their own consumption needs first before considering allocating resources to highvalue cash crops, the price of which can bear high transaction cost. Risk in those circumstances ...
Page 47
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Contents
1 | |
Development Strategies for Poor People in Lessfavoured Areas | 63 |
Resource Management Options | 133 |
Livelihoods and Food Security | 203 |
Markets and Institutional Development | 271 |
Strategies and Policy Priorities | 419 |
Index | 467 |
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Sustainable Poverty Reduction in Less-favoured Areas Ruerd Ruben,J. Pender,Arie Kuyvenhoven Limited preview - 2007 |
Common terms and phrases
activities Africa agricultural production agroforestry analysis apparel assets Bangladesh Benguet Cambisols cash crops China commodity conservation constraints consumption crop production decrease degradation developing countries drylands economic Ecosystems effect endowments Environment environmental services erosion Ethiopia exchange export factors farm households farmers farming systems food crop Food Policy Research food security Gangyan grain GTAP higher highlands IFPRI impact improved income increase infrastructure inputs International Food Policy investments Janvry Jiangxi Kenya labour allocation labour market land and labour less-favoured areas LFAs livelihood strategies livestock Luvisols maize marginal market access migration natural resource Netherlands non-farm nutrient off-farm employment output Pender plots Policy Research Institute poor population density potential poverty reduction private traders programmes rainfall reduce regions renting-in rice rural SGTC Shangzhu sharecropping significant smallholder social capital socio-economic soil fertility Table technologies Tigray transaction costs Uganda variables village vulnerability Wageningen University women World Bank Ziway