Author: | Grace Carswell |
Subcategory: | Economics |
Language: | English |
Publisher: | Institute of Development Studies (December 1997) |
Pages: | 28 pages |
Category: | Perfomance |
Rating: | 4.5 |
Other formats: | rtf lrf lrf lit |
IDS Working Paper 64. Summary. DEFINITIONS Sustainable Livelihoods. A livelihood comprises the capabilities, assets and activities required as a means to a living.
IDS Working Paper 64. This paper examines agricultural intensification as a strategy for achieving sustainable livelihoods, comparing evidence from a number of areas that have undergone such a process - in particular, the introduction of Green Revolution methods.
This paper examines agricultural intensification as a strategy for achieving sustainable livelihoods, comparing evidence . Carswell, G. (1997) Agricultural Intensification and Rural Sustainable Livelihoods: a 'Think Piece', IDS Working Paper 64, Brighton: IDS. Is part of series.
This paper examines agricultural intensification as a strategy for achieving sustainable livelihoods, comparing evidence from a number of areas that have undergone such a process - in particular, the introduction of Green Revolution methods. IDS working papers;64. Library catalogue entry.
IDS Working Paper 72, 1998.
The concept of ‘sustainable livelihoods’ is increasingly important in the development debate. This paper outlines a framework for analysing sustainable livelihoods, defined here in relation to five key indicators.
Carswell, G. (1997) Agricultural intensification and rural sustainable livelihoods: A think piece. IDS. Working Paper 64. Central Bureau of Statistics (2006). Monograph Agriculture Census Nepal, 2001/02 Kathmandu, Nepal. A shift from cultivating cereal crops towards vegetables and other cash crops has evolved through the process of agricultural intensification in the hills. In Nepalese mid hill semi-urban context, intensification has replaced the conventional practice of farming of two crops in a year into the plantation of three and more crops including vegetables in a year
Agricultural intensification and rural sustainable livelihoods: A ‘think piece’, IDS Working Paper 6. oogle Scholar.
Agricultural intensification and rural sustainable livelihoods: A ‘think piece’, IDS Working Paper 6. Chayanov, A. V. (1986). On the theory of peasant economy. Conelly, W. T. (1992). Agricultural intensification in a Philippine frontier community-Impact on labor efficiency and farm diversity. Migration as a livelihood strategy of the poor: the Bangladesh case paper presented at the Regional Conference on Migration, Development and Pro-Poor Policy Choices in Asia. 22–24 June 2003 in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Sommestad, L, & Malmberg, B. (1995).
Agricultural intensification and sustainable rural livelihoods: A think piece. Rural livelihoods and poverty reduction strategies in four African countries. Journal of Development Studies, 40(4), 1–30. CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Ellis, . & Mdoe, N. (2003). IDS working paper 64. Institute of development studies, Brighton, Sussex, UK. 30 p. Department for International Development (DfID) (1999). Livelihoods and rural poverty reduction in Tanzania. World Development, 31(8), 1367–1384. Emtage, . Herbohn, . & Harrison, S. (2007).
Find nearly any book by Grace Carswell. Get the best deal by comparing prices from over 100,000 booksellers
Find nearly any book by Grace Carswell. Get the best deal by comparing prices from over 100,000 booksellers. Cultivating Success in Uganda: Kigezi Farmers and Colonial Policies (Eastern African Studies). ISBN 9781847016010 (978-1-84701-601-0) Softcover, James Currey, 2007.
Agricultural intensification and rural sustainable livelihoods: a think piece. Sustainable rural livelihoods, a framework for analysis. IDS Working Paper 72, 22p. IDS Working Paper 64, 30p. Africa/Asia examples. Theory.
Agricultural Intensification and Rural Sustainable Livelihoods. Agricultural Intensification and Rural Sustainable Livelihoods.