Topics and Regions
Land Portal Foundation administrative account
Details
Location
Contributions
Displaying 4771 - 4780 of 6947Fostering global well-being
In this paper, David Bathrick describes the almost revolutionary changes that have taken place in the economic arena in recent years. This is a story of paradigm shift, where government-led economic growth through the 1970s gave way to the increasingly market-led growth we see now.
Conservation farming in Zambia
Since 1996, a growing coalition of stakeholders from the private sector, government and donor communities has promoted a new package of agronomic practices for smallholders in Zambia. The conservation farming (CF) system they advocate involves: dry-season land preparation using minimum tillage methods (either ox-drawn rip lines or hand-hoe basins laid out in a precise grid of 15,850 basins per hectare); no burning but rather retention of crop residue from the prior harvest; planting and input application in fixed planting stations; and nitrogen-fixing crop rotations.
Living in the city
Data from many countries show that the concentration of poverty and malnutrition is shifting from rural to urban areas. Although many rural people move to the cities seeking to improve their well-being, they often remain mired in poverty and squalor. Rampant violence, flimsy housing, and filthy living conditions, along with hunger and malnutrition, are becoming the daily lot for more and more people as cities grow.
Boletín del GC sobre Género
En este número:; Familias encabezadas por mujeres: ¿desagregación útil o agregación engañosa?; Herencia de la tierra: ¿ceden su lugar los sistemas de herencia matrilineal a los de herencia patrilineal y cuáles son las repercusiones?; Nuevos informes: Sobre crédito; Nuevos informes: Sobre agua y riego; Nuevos informes: Sobre la fecundidad; Nuevos informes: Sobre la asignación de tiempo; Nuevos informes: Investigaciones sobre género en el CGIAR; Nuevos informes: Exposición del IFPRI en las reuniones preparatorias para la Conferencia de Beijing
Leveraging agriculture for improving nutrition and health
Agricultural development has traditionally focused on raising productivity and maximizing production of cereals. In this regard, the world’s farmers and farming systems have made enormous advances, multiplying cereal production several times over in the past half century. Yet hunger, malnutrition, and poor health remain widespread and persistent problems. Nearly 1 billion people still go hungry, and billions more are malnourished.
Tracing power and influence in networks
"Believing that complex problems call for complex solutions and that stakeholders should have a say in policies that concern them, policymakers have strongly promoted the development of forums and organizations made up of many stakeholders to address complex governance issues such as water management. Both developing and developed countries have instituted multistakeholder water governance bodies on local, national, and international levels.
Attrition in longitudinal household survey data
Longitudinal household data can have considerable advantages over much more widely used cross-sectional data. The collection of longitudinal data, however, may be difficult and expensive. One problem that has concerned many analysts is that sample attrition may make the interpretation of estimates problematic. Such attrition may be particularly severe in areas where there is considerable mobility because of migration between rural and urban areas.
Constraints to increasing agricultural productivity in Nigeria
This paper reviews the constraints hindering growth of agricultural productivity in Nigeria by providing an overview of the policy environment that affects agricultural productivity, establishing how the policy environment affects productivity improvement, and proposing lessons relevant for future research and policymaking to promote productivity growth in Nigeria
Agricultural transformation
The author argues that African rural areas behave differently from rural areas in fully commercialized market economies. In commercialized economies, price signals quickly induce factor flows, including items such as investment and technological change. A need for more food is quickly translated into production of either more food or more non-food items to finance food imports. If agricultural potential exists in such countries, market incentives will encourage both appropriate output mixes and investment inflows; growth will then occur.
Fuentes de desigualdad del ingreso y pobreza en las zonas rurales del Pakistan
Abstract