Applied Ethnobotany

Applied Ethnobotany
Author: Anthony B. Cunningham
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2014-10-14
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 1136534660

Its wise and sensitive approach to working with local people will be relevant in situations throughout the world.' ECOS 'The numerous diagrams, tables of data, information flow charts, fieldwork sketches etc. give a great vibrancy to the work... It deserves a wide readership.' TEG News Wild or non-cultivated plants are crucial to the lives of a large portion of the world's population, providing low-cost building materials, fuel, food supplements, medicines, tools and sources of income. Despite their importance, their vulnerability to harvesting and other social impacts is not well understood. Applied Ethnobotany is the first practical guide to be published on how to manage wild plant species sustainably. This detailed manual on wild plant resources sets out the approaches and field methods involved in participatory work between conservationists, researchers and the primary resource users. Supported by extensive illustrations, it explains how local people can learn to assess the pressures on plant resources and what steps to take to ensure their continued availability. For all those involved in resource management decisions regarding plant species and diversity, and in particular those studying or working in conservation, rural development and park management, this guide is invaluable. Published with WWF, UNESCO and Royal Botanic Gardens Kew

Guidelines on National Inventory of Village Forests

Guidelines on National Inventory of Village Forests
Author: K. D. Singh
Publisher: CIFOR
Total Pages: 69
Release: 2000-01-01
Genre:
ISBN: 9798764552

Problem formulation. Survey planning. Survey design. Role of remote sensing. Field survey. Special studies. Data processing. Survey evaluation.

Our People, Our Resources

Our People, Our Resources
Author: Thomas George Barton
Publisher: IUCN
Total Pages: 280
Release: 1997
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9782831703893

This handbook illustrates concepts, methods and tools for "primary environmental care", an approach that seeks to empower communities to meet basic needs while protecting the environment. In particular, it focuses on how population size, structure, growth (or decline) and movements relate to the quality of the environment and the quality of life. Emphasis is placed on a community-led process of participatory action research in which local knowledge and skills are fully utilized. A main purpose is to promote the effective, integrated management of environment and population dynamics for the benefit of local people. As a collection of tools for action, it is designed for professionals in conservation and natural resource management, development, population and public health who wish to promote and assist participatory action research in rural communities.

People, Plants and Protected Areas

People, Plants and Protected Areas
Author: John Tuxill
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 290
Release: 2013-12-16
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 1134203934

Conservation of plant resources is often focused on seed banks and botanical gardens. However, the two authors of this volume present a comprehensive conservation strategy that complements this ex-situ approach with practical guidance on in-situ management and conservation of plant resources. The book aims to facilitate better management of protected areas and to illustrate new approaches to conservation of plants within their landscapes. It draws on concepts from forestry, the agricultural sciences, anthropology, ethnology and ethnobotany and should be useful to practitioners, academics and policy-makers.

People, Plants, and Protected Areas

People, Plants, and Protected Areas
Author: John D. Tuxill
Publisher: Earthscan
Total Pages: 266
Release: 2001
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9781853837821

* An invaluable, practical guide to the management and conservation of plant resources in their natural habitats

Non-Governmental Organisations - Performance and Accountability

Non-Governmental Organisations - Performance and Accountability
Author: Michael Edwards
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2014-03-18
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1134171668

The last decade has seen some significant changes in international development and in the status of non-governmental organisations operating in the field. Not only has the number of NGOs virtually doubled; many of them have seen a considerable growth in their budgets, and have grown closer to governments and official aid agencies. NGOs are acknowledged by many to be more effective agents of development than governments or commercial interests ? even as a ?magic bullet? for development problems. Despite these positive trends, the real impact of the NGO sector is not well documented. This is partly because NGO performance-assessment and accountability methods are weak, and partly because NGOs are caught up increasingly in the world of official aid, which pushes them towards certain forms of evaluation at the expense of others. This unique book takes a hard and critical look at these issues, and describes how NGOs can, and must, improve the way they measure and account for their performance if they are to be truly effective.

Branching Out

Branching Out
Author: Nandini Sundar
Publisher:
Total Pages: 316
Release: 2001
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

This study, based on field work in India, brings out the multiplicity of debates, policies and practices that Joint Forest Management embodies.

Enabling Environment for Joint Forest Management

Enabling Environment for Joint Forest Management
Author: Shree Bhagwan Roy
Publisher:
Total Pages: 272
Release: 1995
Genre: Forest management
ISBN:

The Joint Forest Management Programme, epitomising the 1988 national forest policy of the Government of India, set the country free from the shackles of over a century of bureaucratic straglehold. Centralisation of management was envisaged to give way to decentralisation, unilateralism to participatory decision-making and bureaucratisation to institutionalising people's participation in the protection, management and development of forests. But the policy-frame change-over has not been quick and effective. The involvement of the villagers into the programme where they could deliberate and ecide issues concerning their livelihood through the forest management is, by its nature, very delicate and difficult to achieve. Not only has the hard-crusted resistance to be broken down by winning confidence and proper education through information and knowledge, the due recognition tot he villagers' innate ability and wisdom has to be extended so as to make them equal partners in the implementation of the programme.