Bolivia requiere garantizar seguridad alimentaria con soberanía en la producción lechera, acorde a los impactos del cambio climático Conclusiones del Foro Nacional de la Leche
La Paz, Bolivia
17 de abril de 2017
La Paz, Bolivia
17 de abril de 2017
El cacao en los planes y políticas estatales, una mirada al Ecuador y Bolivia
Lorenzo Soliz Tito
Filósofo. Máster en Desarrollo Humano y Seguridad Alimentaria (UMSS). Trabaja en desarrollo rural hace más de 25 años. Fue Coordinador del Foro Andino – Amazónico y director del Centro de Investigación y Promoción del Campesinado (CIPCA). Actualmente es encargado del área de Planificación y Proyectos en el IPDRS
COMPLEJAS CONJUNCIONES: CAMBIO CLIMÁTICO Y REPRIMARIZACIÓN DE LAS ECONOMÍAS
Karen Mercado Andia *
Hace pocos días, como salidas de algún filme, rondaban imágenes de Chicago con temperaturas extremas de bajo cero, recordándonos, pero esta vez de manera rotunda, los comentarios cotidianos de los cambios en el clima, entre ellos: el calor esta insoportable o este frío no lo habíamos sentido nunca, las lluvias se han retrasado y no podemos empezar la sembrar, la sequía es cada vez más larga… comentarios que estación tras estación se hacen más recurrentes.
TRIUNFO CAMPESINO SOBRE MONSANTO BAYER EN 2018
Rodrigo Bernardo Ortega Bejarano *
TERRITORIOS ALTO ANDINOS PASTORILES: POLÍTICAS, REDES Y ESTRATEGIAS AL CAMBIO CLIMÁTICO.
M. Sc. Carla Virginia Rodas Arano [*]
Las comunidades pastoriles de los Andes tienen una peculiaridad relacionada a su historia: comprenden un territorio construido a partir de una continua movilidad espacial. Este modo de construir territorio va enlazado a la relación de las comunidades con los camélidos y sus movimientos.
Governance of Tenure Voluntary Guidelines video The Voluntary Guidelines on the Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests in the context of National Food Security Directives volontaires sur la gouvernance foncière Les Directives volontaires pour une gouvernance responsable des régimes fonciers applicables aux terres, aux pêches et aux forêts dans le contexte de la sécurité alimentaire mondiale Directrices voluntarias sobre gobernanza de la tenencia Las Directrices voluntarias sobre la gobernanza responsable de la tenencia de la tierra, la pesca y los bosques en el contexto de la s
Corruption is a continuing feature of the Philippines’ natural resource sectors. Given keen interest in the country’s REDD+ potential, it is useful to consider corruption risks related to REDD+ from a political economy perspective. This U4 Issue draws on fieldwork from two REDD+ pilot sites to assess current governance and anti-corruption safeguards related to benefit-sharing, land tenure rights for indigenous peoples, and private sector involvement. Many anti-corruption actions are in place in the pilot sites, but they are weakly embedded in social relations at the local level.
The Atlas of Forest Landscape Restoration Opportunities represents a first-ever global approximation of where degraded forest lands have the potential to be restored—opportunities to reduce poverty, improve food security, mitigate climate change, and protect the environment. The Atlas was produced by World Resources Institute in collaboration with the University of Maryland and the International Union for Conservation of Nature as a contribution to the Global Partnership on Forest Landscape Restoration. The maps in the atlas are presented at a resolution of 1 km.
This executive summary offers recommendations based on lessons learned from Ghana, Liberia and RoC, for other countries of West and Central Africa who are considering how to embed REDD+ social safeguards into their national laws.
The full report is available from here.
The increase of summer temperatures and a prolonged growing season increase the potential for agricultural land use for subarctic agriculture. Nevertheless, land use at borderline ecotones is influenced by more factors than temperature and the length of the growing season, for example soil quality, as the increasing lengths of dry periods during vegetation season can diminish land use potential. Hence, this study focuses on the quality of the soil resource as possible limiting factor for land use intensification in southern Greenland.
Currently, the UK has a high self-sufficiency rate in barley production. This paper assessed the effects of projected climate and land use changes on feed barley production and, consequently, on meat supply in the UK from the 2030s to the 2050s. Total barley production under projected land use and climate changes ranged from 4.6 million tons in the 2030s to 9.0 million tons in the 2050s. From these, the projected feed barley supply ranged from approximately 2.3 to 4.6 million tons from the 2030s to the 2050s, respectively.