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Showing items 1 through 9 of 272.
  1. Library Resource
    August, 2012
    Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa

    This article addresses the problems of
    governance in municipalities in Africa. The concern has been
    to adapt traditional systems of governance to the needs of
    modern urban management. This article investigates the need
    for a new analysis of the twin problems of urban land and
    urban management in sub-Saharan Africa. This need is based
    on the apparent paradox between the dynamic, city-creating
    activities of civil societies in all of these countries, and

  2. Library Resource
    August, 2012
    Eswatini

    Unplanned and unregulated urban
    development is not unique to Swaziland, but addressing the
    issue through direct consultations with beneficiaries is an
    important improvement toward resolving this persistent
    problem. The Swaziland Urban Development Project includes
    standard infrastructure work, such as increasing urban
    roads, rehabilitating and expanding water and sewage
    services, and developing a solid waste facility However, in

  3. Library Resource
    August, 2012

    Participatory community-based Natural
    Resources Management (NRM) Projects have been implemented
    over the last 5-6 years in Benin, Burkina Faso, Mali, and
    Niger with the support of France, Germany, Norway, the
    United States, and the World Bank's International
    Development Association facility. Furthermore, pilot
    operation concentrating on specific NRM issues are underway
    in Chad (pastoral perimeters) and Guinea (land tenure

  4. Library Resource
    August, 2012
    Africa, Western Africa

    This has to be accomplished against a
    background of high illiteracy rates, rapidly growing
    populations, low and erratic rainfall, inherently infertile
    soils, and development strategies which have had a strong
    urban bias. Under such conditions, traditional production
    systems are unable to sustain the population. Without
    significant change, land degradation will accelerate and the
    natural resource base on which agricultural production

  5. Library Resource
    August, 2012

    This Note outlines a larger report
    describing the changing context of demand and supply for
    agricultural water. It identifies the policy, institutional,
    and incentive reform options that will accelerate
    improvements in productivity and pro-poor growth in this
    sector. It articulates priorities for investment and
    indicates options for adjusting the respective roles of the
    public sector and other stakeholders. The report also sets

  6. Library Resource
    August, 2012
    Tanzania

    During the 1970s and 1980s in Tanzania,
    there was a widespread perception, though a somewhat narrow,
    and inaccurate one, that high and accelerating rates of
    deforestation in some areas, was primarily being driven by
    demand for woodfuel, and construction timber. In order to
    take a more comprehensive, and strategic view of the sector,
    the government launched the Tanzania Forestry Action Plan,
    which covered the period 1990/91-2007/08. The Bank-assisted

  7. Library Resource
    August, 2012
    Senegal

    The Sustainable and Participatory Energy
    Management project - PROGEDE was implemented by the
    government between 1997 and 2004. From project preparation
    to supervision the World Bank worked in close collaboration
    with Dutch Co-operation (DGIS). At the time of project
    preparation, forest-based traditional fuels (firewood and
    charcoal), mainly used for household cooking purposes,
    represented 53 percent of Senegal's final energy

  8. Library Resource
    June, 2012

    This paper uses a duration analysis
    based on adoption data spanning more than 25 years from six
    communities in the Central Highlands of Guatemala. The
    analysis explores how household characteristics and external
    trends play into both the adoption and diffusion processes
    of non-traditional exports among smallholders. Adoption was
    initially widespread and rapid, which led nontraditional
    exports to be hailed as a pro-poor success, reaching all but

  9. Library Resource
    August, 2012
    Peru

    Poverty and economic stagnation
    characterize most rural areas in Peru. National growth has
    been slow and uneven since the mid-1970s, benefiting urban
    areas rather than rural ones. Between 1985 and 2000, the
    number of poor people increased by 71 percent. The incidence
    of poverty (67 percent) and extreme poverty (40 percent) is
    highest in rural areas, reaching 73 percent (poverty) and 41
    percent (extreme poverty) in the sierra. This means that 4.2

  10. Library Resource
    August, 2012
    Latin America and the Caribbean

    The proliferation of urban slums is due
    in large part to obsolete regulatory, legal and
    institutional frameworks at the local level governing land
    use, development standards, land registration and titling.
    These regulations are often exclusionary, insisting on
    development norms and standards that are outside the realm
    of the poor to pay and subdivision procedures are often over
    burdensome, leading to informal land subdivision, thus

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