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Displaying 376 - 380 of 447Strategies for sustainable land management and poverty reduction in Uganda:
"The government of Uganda, with help from its development partners, is designing and implementing policies and strategies to address poverty, land degradation, and declining agricultural productivity. Land degradation, especially soil erosion and depletion of soil nutrients, is widespread in Uganda and contributes to declining productivity, which in turn increases poverty.
Market imperfections and land productivity in the Ethiopian Highlands:
This study analyzes how market imperfections affect land productivity in a degraded low-potential cereal- livestock economy in the Ethiopian highlands. A wide array of variables is used to control for land quality in the analysis. Results of three different selection models were compared with least squares models using the HC3 heteroskedasticity-consistent covariance matrix estimator. Market imperfections in labor and land markets were found to affect land productivity. Land productivity was positively correlated with household male and female labor force per unit of land.
Determinants of the Adoption of Sustainable Land Management Practices and Their Impacts in the Ethiopian Highlands
Agricultural Knowledge and Information Systems Rural Development Knowledge and Information Systems Agriculture - Climate Change and Agriculture Crops and Crop Management Systems Environmental Economics and Policies Rural Development Environment
Niger - Impacts of Sustainable Land Management Programs on Land Management and Poverty in Niger
Agriculture - Crops & Crop Management Systems Poverty Reduction - Rural Poverty Reduction Environment - Environmental Economics & Policies Climate Change Poverty Reduction - Poverty Monitoring & Analysis
Land reform in Zimbabwe
There is widespread agreement on the need for land reform in Zimbabwe as a means of reducing poverty. This paper assesses the potential consequences of a land-reform scheme that draws on proposals from Zimbabwe's government in 1998 and 1999. The authors analyze the impact of the reform on resettled farm households and as a development project for which they conduct cost-benefit analysis. The analysis, which considers costs and benefits during a 15-year period, relies on a set of models of family farms that are typical of those that would benefit from land redistribution.