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Policies for Livestock Development in the Ethiopian Highlands

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2005
Ethiopia
Eastern Africa
Kenya
Uganda

Livestock have diverse functions for the livelihood of farmers in mixed croplivestock systems in the highlands of East Africa. Livestock provide food in the form of meat and milk, nonfood items such as draft power, manure, and transport services as inputs into food crop production, and fuel for cooking. Livestock are also a source of cash income through sale of the above items, animals, hides, and skins. Furthermore, they act as a store of wealth and determine social status within the community.

Agricultural technology choices for poor farmers in less-favored areas of South and East Asia

Reports & Research
December, 2006
Southern Asia

During the past several decades dramatic improvement has occurred in agricultural productivity and livelihoods in South and East Asia, stimulated by the Green Revolution and supported by several other factors. Nevertheless, hundreds of millions of rural people in less-favored environments of this region still live in poverty and received limited benefit from the Green Revolution.

On-site and off-Site long-term economic impacts of soil fertility management practices

Policy Papers & Briefs
December, 2008
Eastern Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa
Africa
Kenya

"This article analyzes the on-site and off-site economic impacts of various sustainable land management (SLM) practices in Kenya. Long-term trial data are used to establish the relationship between SLM practices and maize yield. The analysis of on-site effects focuses on the profitability of maize production at the farm level, while the examined off-site effects include carbon sequestration and siltation from maize farms, which increase the cost of potable water production.

Policies for sustainable land management in the highlands of Tigray, Northern Ethiopia

Policy Papers & Briefs
December, 2003
Eastern Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa
Africa
Ethiopia

Participants in this workshop reviewed and discussed findings from the research project‚ Policies for Sustainable Land Management in the Highlands of Tigray, Northern Ethiopia, begun in January 1998, and from other related research being conducted in the highlands of Tigray by Mekelle University and its collaborators.

Determinants of land use change

Reports & Research
December, 1998
Honduras

This study investigates the micro-determinants of land use change using community, household and plot histories, an ethnographic method that constructs panel data from systematic oral recalls. A 20-year historical timeline (1975-1995) is constructed for the village of La Lima in central Honduras, based on a random sample of 97 plots. Changes in land use are examined using transition analysis and multinomial logit analysis.

Policies for sustainable land management in the East African Highlands

December, 2001
Eastern Africa

This document presents the proceedings of the international conference held at the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, April 24-26, 2002. The theme of the conference was Policies for Sustainable Land Management in the East African Highlands, which was convened to bring together researchers, policy makers, development practitioners, donors and others to review, discuss and synthesize the findings and policy implications of policy research related to sustainable land management in the East African highlands.

Strategies for sustainable agricultural development in the Ethiopian Highlands

Policy Papers & Briefs
December, 2001
Sub-Saharan Africa
Africa
Ethiopia

This paper investigates the impacts of population growth, market access, agricultural credit and technical assistance programs, land policies, livelihood strategies and other factors on changes in land management, natural resource conditions and human welfare indicators since 1991 in the northern Ethiopian highlands, based on a survey of 198 villages. We find that population growth has contributed significantly to land degradation, poverty and food insecurity in this region.

Strategies for sustainable land management in the East African Highlands

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2005
Ethiopia
Eastern Africa
Kenya
Uganda

Land degradation is a severe problem in the densely populated highlands of East Africa and elsewhere on the African continent. Soil erosion resulting from cultivation on steeply sloping terrain, mining of soil fertility due to continuous cultivation with limited application of inorganic or organic sources of soil nutrients, and deforestation and overgrazing of rangelands are among the key factors causing low agricultural productivity, widespread poverty, and food insecurity in the region.

Key Issues for the Sustainable Development of Smallholder Agriculture in the East African Highlands

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2005
Ethiopia
Eastern Africa
Kenya
Uganda

This book includes a series of studies of income strategies, land use, and agricultural dynamics and their impacts on welfare and natural resources in the highlands of Ethiopia, Kenya, and Uganda. There are several reasons for focusing on the highlands. First, the complex problems of severe poverty, low productivity, and poor natural resource management seem to be the rule rather than the exception. This is critical because the highlands support the majority of rural populations in the region. Second, within the highlands are some of the most densely populated areas in all of Africa.

Policies for sustainable land management in the highlands of Ethiopia

December, 1999
Ethiopia
Eastern Africa

The objectives of this workshop were to familiarize key policy makers and other stakeholders in Ethiopia with the objectives and activities of the project; review the progress and findings of the project so far; and consider key policy issues affecting the prospects for sustainable land management in the highlands of Ethiopia.

Land Management Options in Western Kenya and Eastern Uganda

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2005
Ethiopia
Eastern Africa
Kenya
Uganda

In the recent past, the image of agricultural and environmental crises in Sub- Saharan Africa (SSA) has become increasingly common. Soil erosion and soil fertility loss are considered to be negatively affecting the productive capacity of the agricultural systems (Giller et al. 1997; Sanchez et al. 1997; Smaling, Nandwa, and Janssen 1997).

Strategies for sustainable agricultural development in the East African highlands

Policy Papers & Briefs
December, 1999
Eastern Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa
Africa

Low agricultural productivity, land degradation and poverty are severe interrelated problems in the East African highlands. While the proximate causes of such problems are relatively well known, the underlying causes are many and complex, and depend upon many site-specific factors that vary greatly across the diverse circumstances of the region. In this paper, we argue that the appropriate strategy for sustainable development depends greatly upon the “pathways of development” that are feasible in a given location.