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Greening cities for improving urban livelihoods

Journal Articles & Books
November, 2006
Qatar
Kyrgyzstan
Iraq
Afghanistan
Azerbaijan
Iran
Jordan
Cyprus
Yemen
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Oman
Uzbekistan
Syrian Arab Republic
Kuwait
Kazakhstan
Tajikistan
Bahrain
Georgia
Armenia
Saudi Arabia
United Arab Emirates

A thematic study on “Urban and peri-urban forestry” focuses on the potentials and constraints for urban forestry development at regional and sub-regional levels considering the current experience and future prospects of urbanization in the region that is expected to take place in the next 15 years. As a complement to this thematic Urban and peri-urban forestry study, a livelihoods analysis of the contribution of forests and trees to urban poor livelihoods has been carried out the Sub-programme on access to natural resources of the Livelihood Support Programme (GCP/INT/803/UK).

Manejo alternativo de conflictos de tenencia de la tierra

Reports & Research
November, 2006
Timor-Leste
Fiji
El Salvador
Zimbabwe
Sri Lanka
Indonesia
Guinea-Bissau
Burkina Faso
Bolivia
Ghana
Mozambique
Guatemala
Philippines
South Africa
Nicaragua
Tanzania
Ecuador
India
Paraguay
Mexico
Papua New Guinea
Mongolia

Este manual de formación se centra en cómo gestionar y resolver conflictos sobre los derechos de tenencia de la tierra, la seguridad de la tenencia y el acceso a la tierra en el campo del desarrollo rural. Resulta de las actividades complementarias realizadas con el Programa de apoyo a los medios de vida, de la FAO, (LSP) y la Unidad de Gestión y Tenencia de la Tierra y con la Coalición Internacional para el Acceso a la Tierra.

Improving gender equity in access to land

Reports & Research
November, 2006

FAO’s Land Tenure Notes provide information on land tenure in a format that can be used by grassroots organizations which work with small farmers and others in rural communities. Improving secure access to land by the rural poor is essential in order to reduce poverty and hunger and to promote sustainable rural development. Improving people’s knowledge of their rights to land is an important part of making rights real, thereby allowing people to improve their livelihoods.

Depleting natural wealth – perpetuating poverty

Journal Articles & Books
November, 2006
Nepal
Laos
Mozambique
Zambia
Kyrgyzstan
Guatemala
China
Cambodia
India
Ethiopia
Mongolia
New Zealand
Asia

This paper represents part of an area of work in support of enhancing access to land and forest resources in support of rural livelihoods in Mongolia. . This synthesis report draws on field studies undertaken recently in five rural areas of Mongolia, covering all ecological zones from montane and northern taiga forest to arid forest in the Gobi. Our findings document and explain, with case studies and documentation from participatory analysis, the downward cycle of resource depletion and descend into poverty that is in action.

Improving the legal framework for participatory forestry

Journal Articles & Books
November, 2006
Switzerland
Nepal
Zambia
Guatemala
Denmark
Sri Lanka
Australia
Austria
Ethiopia
New Zealand
Mozambique
Laos
Philippines
South Africa
Vietnam
Kyrgyzstan
Cambodia
India
Mongolia
Mexico
Canada
Asia

This paper represents part of an area of work in support of enhancing access to land and forest resources in support of rural livelihoods in Mongolia. It is based on learning emerging from an ongoing FAOsupported project called: Support to the development of participatory forest management (TCP/MON/2903). This project has involved the development (through extensive community-level consultations in forest areas) of a detailed Concept Document for the design and implementation of participatory forestry.

Land access in the 21st century

Journal Articles & Books
November, 2006
Bangladesh
Rwanda
Zimbabwe
Peru
Indonesia
Ghana
Venezuela
Guyana
Pakistan
Colombia
Mozambique
Jordan
Costa Rica
Philippines
South Africa
Nicaragua
Malaysia
Uganda
Botswana
India
China
Mexico
Brazil

The present paper seeks to cover the key issues, trends, constraints, challenges, knowledge gaps and policy options on a range of dimensions of land access. Land access is broadly defined as the processes by which people individually or collectively gain rights and opportunities to occupy and utilise land (primarily for productive purposes but also other economic and social purposes) on a temporary or permanent basis.

Assessing the access to forest resources for improving livelihoods in West and Central Asia countries

Reports & Research
November, 2006
Qatar
Kyrgyzstan
Iraq
Afghanistan
Azerbaijan
Iran
United Arab Emirates
Jordan
Cyprus
Yemen
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Oman
Uzbekistan
Syrian Arab Republic
Kuwait
Kazakhstan
Tajikistan
Bahrain
Georgia
Armenia
Saudi Arabia
Lebanon
Central Asia

The contribution of natural resources to the livelihood strategies of poor people has long been appreciated as significant. How to ensure that poor people have rights and opportunities to access natural resources, as well as responsibilities for the sustainable management of natural resources, has become a central question in debates over poverty alleviation.

Improving tenure security for the poor in Africa: Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda - Case Study

Reports & Research
November, 2006
Tanzania
Kenya
Egypt
Sudan
Uganda
Germany
Norway
Africa

This paper identifies the key issues of land tenure security for the rural poor, vulnerable and marginalized in the East African countries of Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. The report finds that most of these issues are common across the three countries, both in terms of the challenges that the communities face and imperatives that inform policy interventions and responses.

Land tenure, food security and investment in postwar Sierra Leone

Journal Articles & Books
November, 2006
Nepal
France
Liberia
Mozambique
Zambia
Kyrgyzstan
Guatemala
Laos
Cambodia
Guinea
India
Sierra Leone
Ethiopia
Mongolia
New Zealand
Africa

This paper represents part of an area of work on land tenure in post-conflict situations. An earlier LSP paper explored post-conflict land tenure in the context of sustainable livelihoods (LSP Working Paper 18: Unruh, J. (2004). “Post-conflict land tenure: using a sustainable livelihoods approach”.) The work is complemented by the FAO Land Tenure Studies 8 “Access to rural land and land administration after violent conflicts”.