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Issuesrural developmentLandLibrary Resource
There are 2, 777 content items of different types and languages related to rural development on the Land Portal.
Displaying 529 - 540 of 2113

Scenario development to explore the future of Europe's rural areas

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2006
Europe

Changes in rural areas, such as depopulation and land abandonment, but also intensification and loss of biodiversity, usually proceed very slowly yet are often irreversible. A scenario study (called EURURALIS) was carried out by Wageningen University and Research Centre in combination with the Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency (MNP) to stimulate the strategic discussion among both national policy makers and policy makers at the European Union level on the future of Europe's rural areas and the role of policy instruments.

Soil fertility and GIS raster models for tropical agroforestry planning in economically depressed and contaminated Caribbean areas (coffee and kidney bean plantations)

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2010
Haiti
Dominican Republic
Central America

In the jaragua-bahoruco-enriquillo biosphere reserve, located on the southern border between the Dominican Republic and Haiti, there are depressed rural areas with soils with high content in Cadmium and other heavy metals which originate naturally in the geological substrate.

Rural networks in the funding period 2007-2013: A critical review of the EU policy instrument.

Policy Papers & Briefs
December, 2011

Rural Networks have been implemented as an instrument to enhance EU rural developmentpolicies in the funding period 2007-2013. Gaps in European programme documents concerningthe networks’ purpose and their evaluation led to a survey of the National Network Unitsbeing conducted in 2010. Besides investigating how these gaps are bridged nationally, the surveyaimed to provide an overview of the development of the networks, of the initial experiencesand challenges faced in running the networks, and to assess their potential impact.

Editorial[: Rural Change and the Revalorisation of Rural Property Objects]

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2009

Property regimes shape the social relations, in particular, social settings, and represent an important element for external intervention and sustainable rural development. The introduction recalls common aspects and specific conceptualisations of property analysis in the field of economics, sociology and social anthropology and summarises main academic discourses about property rights in order to develop a differentiated understanding of property. In Section 1, general trends in property relations characterising modern rural societies are outlined.

Can family farms be considered as institutions?

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2006
Senegal
Africa

Faced with a changing economic environment (poor functioning of the groundnut sector, economic liberalization, etc.), rural households seek first and foremost to secure food for their families by diversifying their production and their economic activities in the village and in urban centres through temporary migration. In this context, the farm seen as an institution cannot be considered as a company in the sense of the classical economic theory. It corresponds more to a system of activities whose operation takes into account both market and family objectives.

HUNGARIAN RENEWABLE ENERGYSTRATEGY AND THE UPRISE OF THE COUNTRYSIDE

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2010
Hungary

While the development, processing and logistics of fossil resources is extremely concentrated and monopolysed, the production and utilisation of renewable energy – with the exception of larger hydroelectric plants – is deconcentrated. It is especially important that the renewable sources of energy available to us might play a decisive role in the uprise of the Hungarian countryside, as green energy production might be profitable even in areas where the land is less suitable for agriculture. There is a hot sea beneath 40% of the territory of the country.

Predicting regional rice production in South Korea using spatial data and crop-growth modeling

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2003
Republic of Korea

It is well recognized that aggregation of the inhomogeneous data for soils, management, and weather within a land unit for crop simulation plays a key role in the scaling-up task of crop simulation at regional scales. While the other spatial data could be obtained at a desired level, weather data might not be available in mountainous regions where the production system is comprised of many small farms.

From Agrarian Reform to Ethnodevelopment in the Highlands of Ecuador

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2008
Ecuador

Through an examination of interventions in the agrarian structures and rural society of the Ecuadorian Andes over the past 40 years, this article explores the gradual imposition of a particular line of action that separates rural development from the unresolved question of the concentration of land ownership and wealth among the very few. This imposition has been the consequence, it is argued, of the new development paradigms implemented in Andean peasant communities since the end of land reform in the 1970s.

Trade-offs between maintenance of ecosystem services and socio-economic development in rural mountainous communities in southern Spain: A dynamic simulation approach

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2013
Spain

Mountainous rural communities have traditionally managed their land extensively, resulting in land uses that provide important ecosystem services for both rural and urban areas. Over recent decades, these communities have undergone drastic changes in economic structure, population size and land use. Our understanding of the exact mechanisms that drive these changes is limited, and there is also a lack of integrative approaches to enable decision makers to steer rural development towards a more sustainable path.

Personal, physical and socioeconomic factors affecting farmers' adoption of land consolidation

Policy Papers & Briefs
June, 2007
Turkey
Europe

Ownership of agricultural land is very fragmented in Turkey, as is the case in countries within central Europe. This prevents agricultural efficiency from reaching desired levels. Land consolidation involves redistributing land ownership so that individual farmers own fewer, larger, more compact and more contiguous land parcels. In Turkey, generally voluntary land consolidation projects are performed, while some financial limitations and political conditions prevent land consolidation reach to its desired level.