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National Regulations for Groundwater: Options, Issues and Best Practices

Journal Articles & Books
July, 1999
France
Estonia
Belgium
Spain
Germany
Denmark
Australia
Jamaica
United Kingdom
Austria
Niger
Kenya
United States of America
Philippines
Oman
Italy
Netherlands
India
Mexico

The sustainable management and use of groundwater resources as a source of drinking water supplies, for irrigation, and for other consumptive uses, as well as a supplementary source of surface river flows and of wetlands and wildlife habitats, calls for increasing attention to two major and interdependent sources of concern, namely, depletion and pollution.

Women's land rights in the transition to individualized ownership

Policy Papers & Briefs
December, 1998
Sub-Saharan Africa
Africa
Ghana

Based on a survey of 60 villages in Western Ghana, where cocoa is the dominant crop, this study explores evolutionary changes in land tenure institutions on women's land rights and the efficiency of tree resource management....With increasing population pressure, customary land tenure institutions in Western Ghana have evolved toward individualized systems in order to provide appropriate incentives to invest in tree planting and management. Contrary to the conventional wisdom, individualization of land rights has strengthened women’s rights to land.

Land tenure and farm management efficiency

Policy Papers & Briefs
December, 1998
South-Eastern Asia
Asia
Indonesia

This study attempts to identify the impacts of land tenure institutions on the efficiency of farm management based on a case study of paddy rice and upland cinnamon production in the Kerinci Valley in West Sumatra, where most of Indonesia’s cinnamon is produced. The attractiveness of cinnamon as a commercial crop has implications for forest preservation. Kerinci Valley is an enclave surrounded by the Kerinci Seblat National Park, one of the largest parks in Sumatra.

Incomes from the forest: methods for the development and conservation of forest products for local communities

Journal Articles & Books
December, 1998

In the last two decades, there has been increasing interest in the potential of small-scale non-timber forest product collection and other low-impact uses of the forest for achieving forest conservation. Experience suggests however that such uses do not guarantee conservation and economic outcomes. This book documents and compares methods to assess options for forest-based livelihoods and their outcomes.