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Livelihoods: income, enterprises and markets impinging on livelihoods
Publications
CEESP publications. Policy Matters, the journal of CEESP Policy Matters Issue
No. 14, March 2006. Poverty, wealth and conservation.
details
CEESP publications. Policy Matters Issue No. 12, September
2003. Special issue for the World Parks Congress. Community
Empowerment for Conservation
details
CEESP publications. Issue No. 10, September 2002. Special
issue for the World Summit on Sustainable Development.
Sustainable Livelihoods and Co-management of Natural Resources.
PDF:
English (size
2.9 MB)
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Macqueen, D., Bose, S., Bukula, S., Kazoora, C., Ousman, S.,
Porro, N. and Weyerhaeuser, H. (2006). Working together:
forest-linked small and medium enterprise associations and
collective action. IIED Gatekeeper Series No. 125. IIED, London,
UK.
PDF: English
Mayers, J. (2006). Poverty reduction through commercial
forestry: What evidence? What prospects?. The Forests Dialogue,
New Haven, USA.
PDF: English
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World Bank Forests Sourcebook. Practical Guidance for
Sustaining Forests in Development Cooperation, on numerous
topics of relevance for forest people’s livelihoods.
PDF:
English
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USAID. 2002. Nature, Wealth, and Power: Emerging Best
Practice for Revitalizing Rural Africa.
This publication is another valuable resource on livelihoods,
which also address power issues: This document - Nature, Wealth,
and Power (NWP) - is about rural development in Africa. It is a
preliminary statement of lessons learned from more than 20 years
of natural resource–based development in rural Africa. Twenty
years ago, natural resource management programs took a
predominantly technical approach to getting rural development
moving and responding to perceived environmental crises. The
limitations of this approach were subsequently revealed as
projects failed to meet their objectives and be sustainable.
PDF:
English
Weblinks
International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED),
London, UK.
website: http://www.iied.org/
This IUCN website
includes many articles of relevance for livelihoods. See
especially Volume 14
- CIFOR’s PEN project:
website:
http://www.cifor.org/pen
PEN stands for Poverty and Environment Network, and it represents a group of
doctoral students from around the world, led by senior researchers from
various universities and research institutions, who have incorporated a
standard interview schedule into their dissertation research.
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Rights and Resources Initiative:
website: http://www.rightsandresources.org/
This
is a global initiative that seeks to improve local people’s rights and
access to resources, including secure tenure.
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SDC, Intercooperation and ODI site on poverty and wellbeing:
http://www.poverty-wellbeing.net/
These institutions have developed a framework from which to address poverty
and human well being that is straightforward and widely used.
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Ken Chomitz’s At Loggerheads? Agricultural Expansion, Poverty Reduction,
and Environment in the Tropical Forests
details
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The Poverty and Conservation Learning Group (PCLG):
http://www.povertyandconservation.info/en/
is a forum for facilitating mutual learning between key stakeholders, from a
range of backgrounds, on conservation-poverty linkages. The PCLG website is
our key mechanism for sharing and dissemination of information and
experience on conservation-poverty linkages. The site is centred on four
key, fully searchable, databases: a bibliographic database; an organisations
database; an initiatives database; and a case studies database.
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The Learning for Sustainability site:
http://learningforsustainability.net, has been substantially revised and
updated over the past few months as a guide to on-line resources for
government agency staff, NGOs and other community leaders working to support
social learning and collective action as an underlying mechanism to address
sustainability issues. A central section of this site links the reader to a
range of guides, tools and checklists that can be drawn upon for guidance in
this area to address issues such as participation and engagement. Other
pages here highlight the lessons that have emerged from researchers and
practitioners in different sectors. These include lessons from the HIV/AIDS
sector, public health, and protected natural areas. They are shown on their
different pages to highlight the fact that each sector is looking at similar
human dimensions practice change lessons, and that the more we can learn
across sectors the better. A new page in this section now covers tools, tips
and techniques for facilitators and other social engagement specialists.
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