292,481 research outputs found
A livelihoods study of farmers and fishers in Dang Tong Village Kampong Chhnang Province
This is the report of a livelihoods study team working together with villagers from Dang Tong Village in Kampong Chhnang Province, Cambodia. The study of the livelihoods of farmers and fishers is based on information provided by the villagers of Dang Tong, who shared their knowledge and raised real problems related to their livelihoods. [PDF contains 37 pages.
Fisheries Stakeholders and Their Livelihoods in Tamil Nadu and Puducherry
Fisheries Management for Sustainable Livelihoods (FIMSUL), is a project implemented by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) with the Government of Tamil Nadu and Puducherry in India under the World Bank Trust Fund. The project aims at establishing frameworks, processes and building capacities of various stakeholders especially the Government, to facilitate the planning, design and implementation of appropriate fisheries development and management policies. The project includes a series of stakeholder consultations and consensus building apart from detailed review and analysis in the areas of stakeholders, livelihoods, policy, legal and institutional frame work and fisheries management. Based on this, the project comes up with various options. Stakeholder and livelihoods analysis is an essential part of the project. Hence, the team developed a detailed methodology for stakeholder consultations which includes district level stake holder consultation, focus group discussions, household interviews and validation meetings. The stakeholder and livelihoods analysis following the above steps were done through six NGO partners working along the coast of Tamil Nadu and Puducherry who were initially trained on the methodology. The NGO partners : PLANT, GUIDE, FERAL, SIFFS, DHAN Foundation and TMSSS, especially a team of dedicated staff engaged by them had done an excellent work in completing comprehensive field exercises and bringing out 12 district/regional reports. These are published separately. This report is a compilation, and complete analysis of the stakeholders and livelihoods based on all the field level consultations.This report is expected to be an important reference to primary stakeholders' perspective of the important stakeholders in the sector, the livelihoods and livelihoods changes, the adaptive and coping mechanism, the relationships between the stakeholders and their hopes and aspirations. For any development intervention for any sector or stakeholder group, region-wise in marine fisheries in Tamil Nadu and Puducherry, the information from this report could be an important starting point
The Sustainable Livelihoods Approach
{Excerpt} The sustainable livelihoods approach improves understanding ofthe livelihoods of the poor. It organizes the factors that constrain or enhance livelihood opportunities, and shows how they relate. It can help plan development activities and assess the contribution that existing activities have made to sustaining livelihoods.
The sustainable livelihoods approach facilitates the identification of practical priorities for actions that are based on the views and interests of those concerned but they are not a panacea. It does not replace other tools, such as participatory development, sector-wide approaches, or integrated rural development. However, it makes the connection between people and the overall enabling environment that influences the outcomes of livelihood strategies. It brings attention to bear on the inherent potential of people in terms of their skills, social networks, access to physical and financial resources, and ability to influence core institutions
Yemaya, No. 43, July 2013
South Africa- Shifting livelihoods, Viet Nam-Strengthening livelihoods, Chile - gains and challenges, Uganda- making changes possible, Maritza Mena from Costa Rica, Ground-breaking gender indicators, You tube resource
Invasive alien species : a threat to sustainable livelihoods in the Pacific? : an assessment of the effects of Wasmannia auropunctata (little fire ant) and Achatina fulica (giant African snail) on rural livelihoods in the Solomon Islands : a dissertation presented in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Development Studies, Massey University, Manawatū, New Zealand
Invasive alien species (IAS) are a global phenomenon and are recognised as a driver
of environmental change which can affect the well-being of people in a multitude of
ways. Despite this, the role of IAS in local livelihoods has received relatively little
attention. Influencing all three of the sustainable development pillars (social,
economic, environmental), IAS should be recognised as a significant development
issue. But they are not. As such, IAS issues are new to many sectors and governments
and therefore largely go unseen and un-actioned.
Contemporary rural livelihoods in the Solomon Islands are heavily reliant on
subsistence/semi-subsistence agriculture. Following a livelihoods’ framework
developed for the Solomon Islands, this thesis explores the influence IAS have on rural
livelihoods in this country. Using two qualitative case studies, Wasmannia
auropunctata (little fire ant) and Achatina fulica (giant African snail), this study
investigates how vulnerable/resilient rural livelihoods are to the effects of IAS and the
implications IAS have for sustainable development in the Solomon Islands.
The effects of IAS on rural livelihoods are complex and at times contradictory. W.
auropunctata for the most part is not negatively affecting the dominant livelihood
strategy (subsistence/semi-subsistence agriculture) practised in the Solomon Islands.
While there are some social impacts associated with W. auropunctata, overall
Solomon Island households can be considered resilient to this IAS. Achatina fulica is
a different story. This species is negatively affecting the subsistence/semi-subsistence
agricultural sector on which so many rural Solomon Island households depend. This
has resulted in households implementing negative livelihood diversification measures
as they fail to cope or adapt to the snails’ presence. Unlike for W. auropunctata,
Solomon Island households have not demonstrated any resilience to A. fulica.
Understanding how rural livelihoods are affected by various stressors and adverse
events can help to design development policies and interventions geared towards
building better lives for all people. This can only occur however, if the full range of
shocks are recognised. To date, this is not the case for IAS, and as such, they are still a significant missing component of development policy
Sustainable development : a model Indonesian SRI co-operative : this research paper is presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of International Development, Massey University, New Zealand
This research report explores how ‘sustainable livelihoods’ have been achieved at a model cooperative
using the ‘System of Rice Intensification’ named SIMPATIK. To conduct the research a
novel template was developed. The framework was required following a review of sustainable
livelihood literature which found deficiencies with the ‘sustainable livelihoods framework’,
particularly its treatment of equity, social capital, culture and agro-ecology which disqualified the
framework as an appropriate approach for the research. Amekawa’s (2011) ‘Integrated Sustainable
Livelihoods Framework’ which synthesises agro-ecology and the sustainable livelihoods framework
is then discussed. Further work is then presented on social capital which this paper argues has a
critical role in facilitating access to livelihood capitals. A discussion of the significance of culture
then follows to underline its importance as a form of livelihood capital. The research then introduces
an operational model that is appropriate to the local cultural, institutional and geographical context to
demonstrate how livelihood capitals are linked to livelihood outcomes, a model I have labelled the
‘Apt-Integrated Sustainable Livelihoods Framework’.
This framework is then informed through field research at the SIMPATIK co-operative. Impact
pathways through ‘synergetic forms of social capital’ and the System of Rice Intensification (SRI) are
shown indeed to lead to sustainable livelihood outcomes for research participants. The ‘sequencing’
of livelihood capitals is seen to be critical and the research culminates in the development of a ‘SRI
Co-operative Template for Sustainable Livelihoods’; a transferable model that shows how SRI can be
promoted as a sustainable livelihood strategy
Sustainable Livelihoods Enhancement and Diversification (SLED): A Manual for Practitioners
The aim of this document is to provide development practitioners with an introduction to the SLED process as well as guidance for practitioners facilitating that process. The Sustainable Livelihoods Enhancement and Diversification (SLED) approach has been developed by Integrated Marine Management Ltd (IMM) through building on the lessons of past livelihoods research projects as well as worldwide experience in livelihood improvement and participatory development practice. It aims to provide a set of guidelines for development and conservation practitioners whose task it is to assist people in enhancing and diversifying their livelihoods. Under the Coral Reefs and Livelihoods Initiative (CORALI), this approach has been field tested and further developed in very different circumstances and institutional settings, in six sites across South Asia and Indonesia. While this process of testing and refining SLED has been carried out specifically in the context of efforts to manage coastal and marine resources, it is an approach that can be applied widely wherever natural resources are facing degradation because of unsustainable human use. The SLED approach provides a framework within which diverse local contexts and the local complexities of livelihood change can be accommodated
Goodbye to projects? The institutional impact of sustainable livelihoods approaches on development interventions
The research goodbye to projects grew out of the increasing interest in sustainable livelihoods approaches (SLA) and growing disillusion with projects as mechanisms for addressing the development needs of the poor. Its aim was to investigate the implication of the adoption of SLA on the management of development interventions and in particular of the future of development projects. The underlying research questions were: a) How are elements of the sustainable livelihoods principles being applied in practice b) What are the problems and challenges for managing livelihoods-oriented development interventions? c) What is the future for development projects, given the increase in direct budget and sectoral assistance?Livelihoods, Projects, Economic development, EPRC, Muhumuza, Sustainable development, Financial Economics, Institutional and Behavioral Economics, International Relations/Trade, Labor and Human Capital, Livestock Production/Industries, Political Economy,
Livelihoods as relational im/mobilities:exploring the everyday practices of young female sex workers in Ethiopia
Age is now considered alongside other differentiating categories for exploring mobility experiences, yet little work has emerged conceptualising the im/mobilites of marginalized young people living in particularly difficult circumstances. This article therefore, explores the relational im/mobilities of young female sex workers in Ethiopia aged between 14 and 18 years in order to understand how their livelihoods are shaped by the connections betweentheir relations with others, im/mobilities and survival in everyday life. The article draws on detailed narratives and participatory ‘mobility’ mapping with 60 young sex workers in two locations in Ethiopia. Conceptually this article moves beyond sedentary and nomadic conceptions of mobility to what Jensen (2009) terms ‘critical mobility thinking’, where lives do not just happen in static enclaves or nomadic wanderings but are connected through multiple communities of interest and across time and space. Through these processes, ‘everyday’ livelihoods are shaped and experienced. Further, drawing on Massey’s (2005) relational geographical theory, where socio-temporal practices constitute places in a complex web of flows, the article reveals that young sex workers critical im/mobilities are relational: their livelihoods and identities shaped within and between places based on their ability to move, or not. The article reveals that these relational im/mobilities are important for securing work, protection and accessing services, both within and between places and across a variety of sex work livelihoods. The article concludes by demonstrating that consideration of livelihoods as relational and mobile is central for the development of appropriate interventions
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