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Cropland expansion in Ethiopia: Economic and climatic considerations for highland agriculture

LandLibrary Resource
Policy Papers & Briefs
december, 2018
Eastern Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa
Africa
Ethiopia

Agricultural GDP in Ethiopia grew at an average 7.3 percent per year between 2001/02 and 2012/13. Most of this dynamism occurred in the highlands, where high population density and land scarcity begs the question of how future agricultural output can be maintained to sustain the previous decade’s momentum.

Farm and family balance project: Evidence from Uganda

LandLibrary Resource
Policy Papers & Briefs
december, 2018
Eastern Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa
Africa
Uganda

This project tests two approaches to increasing women’s integration into and returns from cash crop value chains. We aim to determine whether these interventions affect intrahousehold allocation of resources, decision-making power, consumption and investment, productivity of the cash crop at the household level, and success of contract ful-fillment for the buyer of the crop.

Kenya: Kakamega county policy brief on land degradation

LandLibrary Resource
Policy Papers & Briefs
december, 2018
Kenya
Eastern Africa
Africa

This policy brief aims to give an overview of land degradation hotspots in Kakamega County and the policy options for land restoration. In this assessment, land degradation is referred to as the persistent loss of ecosystem function and productivity caused by disturbances from which the land cannot recover without human intervention (unaided).

Kenya: Bungoma country policy brief on land degradation

LandLibrary Resource
Policy Papers & Briefs
december, 2018
Kenya
Eastern Africa
Africa

This policy brief aims to give an overview of land degradation hotspots in Bungoma County and the policy options for land restoration. In this assessment, land degradation is referred to as the persistent loss of ecosystem function and productivity caused by disturbances from which the land cannot recover without human intervention (unaided).

Institutional linkages and landscape governance systems: The case of Mt. Marsabit, Kenya

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
december, 2018
Kenya
Eastern Africa
Africa

The desire to overcome fragmented management of the natural ecosystems on which human beings depend has contributed to a growing interest in landscape approaches and to deeper questions about landscape governance systems. We assessed the emergent governance system that corresponds to the Mt.

Policy brief: Land degradation in Kenya

LandLibrary Resource
Policy Papers & Briefs
december, 2018
Kenya
Eastern Africa
Africa

This policy brief aims to give an overview of land degradation hotspots in Kenya and the policy options for land restoration. In this assessment, land degradation is referred to as the persistent loss of ecosystem function and productivity caused by disturbances from which the land cannot recover without human intervention (unaided).

Kenya: Siaya county policy brief on land degradation

LandLibrary Resource
Policy Papers & Briefs
december, 2018
Kenya
Eastern Africa
Africa

This policy brief aims to give an overview of land degradation hotspots in Siaya County and the policy options for land restoration. In this assessment, land degradation is referred to as the persistent loss of ecosystem function and productivity caused by disturbances from which the land cannot recover without human intervention (unaided).

Land use alters dominant water sources and flow paths in tropical montane catchments in East Africa

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
december, 2018
Africa
Eastern Africa

Conversion of natural forest to other land uses could lead to significant changes in catchment hydrology, but the nature of these changes has been insufficiently investigated in tropical montane catchments, especially in Africa.

Barriers to Participating in a Payment for Ecosystem Services Project in Githambara Micro Catchment, Upper-Tana, Kenya

LandLibrary Resource
december, 2018
Kenya
Eastern Africa
Africa

International Non-Governmental Organizations have popularized payment for ecosystem services (PES) because of their potential to simultaneously achieve rural development and ecological conservation goals (GEF Secretariat 2014). Despite their rapid diffusion, there is insufficient assessment of their potential implications for social and economic stratification (Redford and Adams 2009).