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Integrated coastal area management and agriculture, forestry and fisheries

Journal Articles & Books
Novembro, 1998
Dominica
Fiji
Maurícia
República Dominicana
Samoa
Micronésia
Vanuatu
Tonga
Haiti
Ilhas Cook
Comores
Guiana
Cabo Verde
Trindade e Tobago
Suriname
Palau
Marshall, Ilhas
Belize
São Cristóvão e Névis (Saint Kitts e Nevis)
Granada
Jamaica
São Vicente e Granadinas
Cuba
Malta
Guiné
Ilhas Salomão
Seychelles
Kiribati
Tuvalu
Nauru
Santa Lúcia
São Tomé e Príncipe
Baamas
Bahrein
Antígua e Barbuda
Barbados
Papua-Nova Guiné
Niue
Américas
Europa
Ásia
África
Oceânia

Land Reform in Uzbekistan

Journal Articles & Books
Maio, 1998
Uzbekistan

FIRST PARAGRAPH OF CHAPTER: Uzbekistan emerged as an independent state in September l99l with a legacy of an undiversified monocultural agriculture heavily specialized in cotton. During the Soviet era, cotton production in Uzbekistan registered persistent gains from the very beginning of collectivization in 1928, often at the expense of wheat and other cereals.

Starch industry development as a strategy for agro-food based rural industrialization

Reports & Research
Dezembro, 1997
Asia
Vietnam
Thailand

To promote development, there is increasing need for activities and policies which generate and diversify income in rural areas. The starch industry in Viet Nam provides a good example of rural industrialization whereby low-value agricultural commodities such as cassava and canna are processed into high-value commodities such as starch to be used in a variety of food and non-food industries. Though this sector is relatively small, it has a high potential in terms of demand growth, poverty reduction, and income diversification in rural areas, particularly the less favored ones.

Capital Outflow from the Agriculture Sector in Thailand

Dezembro, 1997

To understand Thailand's policy on development and industrialization, one must also study its policy on trade and agriculture. Certain Thai policies have facilitated economic development in Thailand: Raising agricultural productivity even during the early period of import substitution. The relatively equal distribution of land. Decentralized industrial growth. The labor-intensive export orientation of both rural and urban industries. Generally open, merit-based access to education.