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Community Organizations Danish Institute for International Studies
Danish Institute for International Studies
Danish Institute for International Studies
Acronym
DIIS
University or Research Institution
Email

Location

Denmark

DIIS is an independent research institution for international studies, financed primarily by the Danish state. We conduct and communicate multidisciplinary research on globalisation, security, development and foreign policy and within these areas we aim to be agenda-setting in research, policy and public debate. DIIS participates in academic networks and publish in high-ranking academic journals, always striving to excel in academic scholarship. We continuously assess Denmark's foreign and political situation and inform the Danish media, politicians and the public about our work.

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Resources

Displaying 16 - 20 of 26

Land Rights and Land Conflicts in Africa: The Tanzania Case

Reports & Research
November, 2006
Africa

Issues identified as being of major importance in relation to the land rights and land conflict situation are: questions related to governance; contradictions and lack of harmonisation between recent laws and policies in Tanzania; the existing power relations (including gender relations); and present development priorities. Makes it clear that dealing with land matters is in essence political and presents a series of recommendations for interventions in the field of land rights.

Land Rights and Land Conflicts in Africa: The Benin Case

Reports & Research
October, 2006
Africa

The report discusses the approach and methods underlying the study and offers conceptual clarifications. It presents the legal framework and historical context in relation to political economy and identity politics. The bulk of the report is devoted to the analysis of significant case studies: on boundary conflicts linked to decentralisation and development programmes, the conservation issue, autochthons/migrants relations, the ‘youth factor’. A final section outlines policy orientations.

Peasant Cotton Cultivation and Marketing Behaviour in Tanzania since Liberalisation

December, 1997
Tanzania
Sub-Saharan Africa

Discusses the debate around structural adjustment and African agriculture, the history of the Tanzanian cotton sector and farming systems in the main cotton growing area of the country before reporting the results of a small survey of cultivators carried out at the end of the 1997/8 seed cotton marketing season. This survey, carried out in the fourth year of market liberalisation, covered crop sales, farming methods, marketing behaviour and perceptions of the marketing system.

Contestation over Political Space: The State and Demobilisation of Party Politics in Kenya

December, 1997
Kenya
Sub-Saharan Africa

Appraises political liberalization and subsequent contestation over political space in Kenya. The discussion centres on how, from the colonial period, elite politics have precluded organization and crystallization of popular democracy.The paper specifically examines the historicity of political factionalism and attendant decline of multi-partyism.