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Showing items 1 through 9 of 5.
  1. Library Resource
    Reports & Research
    Policy Papers & Briefs
    May, 2014
    Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa

    This paper focuses on three interrelated questions on urbanization and the geography of development. First, although we herald cities with their industrial bases as "engines of growth," does industrialization in fact drive urbanization? While such relationships appear in the data, the process is not straightforward. Among developing countries, changes in income or industrialization correlate only weakly with changes in urbanization. This suggests that policy and institutional factors may also influence the urbanization process.

  2. Library Resource
    Journal Articles & Books
    June, 2014
    Rwanda

    To say that access to land is one of the most important conditions for the
    empowerment of African women, would be an understatement. The cultivation of land is one
    of the main sources of income and economic wealth depends strongly on a well-elaborated
    system of land tenure. However, developing and protecting land rights1
    for women in mainly
    male-dominated societies is a long-term work. Even though law initiatives2 may guarantee a
    de jure equal access to land for women, the outcome highly depends on the way the culturebound

  3. Library Resource
    May, 2014
    Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa

    The current assessment builds on
    previously published reviews of poverty reduction strategy
    programs (PRSPs), and is the sixth report in a series. This
    paper aims at presenting a clearer picture of how PRSPs
    influence the developmental agenda in 11 African countries
    by assessing the level of environmental mainstreaming in the
    Poverty Reduction Strategy Process. The paper includes the
    following headings: introduction; framework for assessment;

  4. Library Resource
    May, 2014
    Ethiopia

    The authors use data from Ethiopia to
    empirically assess determinants of participation in land
    rental markets, compare these to those of administrative
    land reallocation, and make inferences on the likely impact
    of households' expectations regarding future
    redistribution. Results indicate that rental markets
    outperform administrative reallocation in terms of
    efficiency and poverty. Households who have part-time jobs

  5. Library Resource
    May, 2014
    Ethiopia

    The authors use a large data set from
    Ethiopia that differentiates tenure security and
    transferability to explore determinants of different types
    of land-related investment and its possible impact on
    productivity. While they find some support for endogeneity
    of investment in trees, this is not the case for terraces.
    Transfer rights are unambiguously investment-enhancing. The
    large productivity effect of terracing implies that, even

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