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There are 2, 177 content items of different types and languages related to Pobreza on the Land Portal.

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UN-REDD Viet Nam Programme: Piloting Participatory Carbon Monitoring

Diciembre, 2010
Viet Nam
Oceanía
Asia oriental
Asia meridional

This policy brief outlines participatory carbon monitoring (PCM) pilots in Viet Nam. Developing countries undertaking REDD+ activities will need to provide evidence of “results-based action” in order to receive payments for the reduction of carbon emissions or the enhancement of terrestrial carbon stocks. The brief begins by outlining the context of PCM activities in Viet Nam and then goes onto describe the objectives of PCM. Testaments from PCM participants are provided and key steps of PCM are discussed.

Impact of Access to Credit on the Poor: Research Design and Baseline Survey for a Longitudinal Study

Diciembre, 1997
Filipinas
Asia oriental
Oceanía

Presents the baseline survey for a study of the impact of microfinance services offered by Alalay sa Kaunlaran sa Gitnang Luzon, Inc (ASKI). ASKI is a microfinance institution based in Cabanatuan City in the Philippines, and is a member of the BWTP Network.The baseline survey is the first step in a longitudinal process. There have been comparatively few studies in the Philippines of the impact of microfinance on poor clients.

HIV/AIDS and its impacts on land tenure and livelihoods in Lesotho: comments on Lesotho country study

Conference Papers & Reports
Diciembre, 2001
África subsahariana
Lesotho

This paper addresses the amelioration of the impact of AIDS on land tenure and livelihoods. The author argues that, in Lesotho, land policy development should be informed by the status of community support and welfare for those infected and affected by HIV/AIDS. He offers three main policy recommendations as follows: Land administrators should be fully informed about the epidemic and various legislations that govern the rights of the affected households. This will help to ensure uniform implementation of measures to support affected households.

Microdeterminants of Consumption, Poverty, Growth, and Inequality in Bangladesh

Diciembre, 1998
Bangladesh
Asia meridional

What are the gains from a better education, more land ownership, or a different occupation in Bangladesh? Do the gains differ in urban and rural areas? Have they remained stable over time? Do household size, family structure, and gender affect well-being? Do consumption, poverty, and inequality depend more on characteristics of households or on the areas in which those households are located?Using household data from five successive national surveys, Wodon analyzes the microdeterminants of (and changes in) consumption, poverty, growth, and inequality in Bangladesh from 1983 to 1996.

Rising Wealth Inequality and Changing Social Structure in Rural China, 1988-95

Diciembre, 1998
China
Asia oriental
Oceanía

Finds that a new system of social stratification is emerging in rural China as a result of economic reforms, that is far less equal than what preceeded it. As part of this trend, wealth inequality has increased, markedly in a short period of time. A relatively equal distribution of land has prevented furher inequality an dblocked the rise of a landed elite.However what has emerged is a "worker elite", mainly concentrated in cooperative enterprises in the coastal provinces and in richer provinces.

Tackling gender issues in sustainable land management

Training Resources & Tools
Diciembre, 2001
África subsahariana
Kenya
América Latina y el Caribe
Nicaragua
Asia meridional
India

This toolkit provides a framework for main-streaming gender in rural development activities.It addresses the lack of conceptual and practical tools in the area of sustainable land management. Its modular design allows for individual approaches and targets development staff at the project and programme levels, with the aim of helping them to find practical ways of dealing with gender issues in rural development activities.

Papers of FAO/SARPN Workshop on HIV/AIDS and Land, Pretoria

Websites
Diciembre, 2001
África subsahariana
Kenya
Malawi
Tanzania
Lesotho
Sudáfrica

Series of country papers on HIV/AIDS and land in Lesotho, Kenya, South Africa, Malawi, Tanzania, with concluding paper on methodological and conceptual issues. The key questions addressed include: The impact on and changes in land tenure systems (including patterns of ownership, access, and rights) as a consequence of HIV/AIDS with a focus on vulnerable groups. The ways that HIV/AIDS affected households are coping in terms of land use, management and access, e.g. abandoning land due to fear of losing land, renting out due to inability to utilise land, distress sale of land, etc.

Stimulating indigenous agribusiness development in the northern communal areas of Namibia : a concept paper

Diciembre, 1996
Namibia
África subsahariana

This concept paper proposes (a) market driven farm and off-farm entrepreneurial options, that could take advantage of the existing opportunities, thus leading to the creation of indigenous oriented economic growth and (b) empowerment of the small and medium scale private enterprises to create an enabling environment conducive for equitable growth of their businesses.

Land liberalisation in Africa: inflicting collateral damage on women?

Diciembre, 2002
África subsahariana

Is the World Bank’s approach to land relations gender insensitive? Is it realistic to pin poverty reduction aspirations on the promotion of credit markets and reliance on women’s unpaid labour? Does the acquisition of secure tenure rights necessarily benefit poor women? How should advocates of women’s rights in Africa respond to the Bank’s land agenda?

Land access, off - farm income and capital access in relation to the reduction of rural poverty

Diciembre, 1997

The current framework of economic growth and development includes a general trend towards the privatization of land rights and a collapse of collective structures in agriculture as well as a move towards reliance on land markets as the means of peasant access to participation in the development process. Despite the removal of land reform as an explicit part of the policy agenda, it is clear that the situations which led to the activation of land reforms in past decades are still in place.