The primary inquiry of this study is to identify and understand the underlying factors that enable smallholder farmer groups to improve their market situation.
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The transformation of the Afar commons in Ethiopia
The major economic activity for pastoralists is animal husbandry. The harsh environment in which herders raise their livestock requires constant mobility to regulate resource utilisation via a common property regime.
Collective action and vulnerability
Collective action can help individuals, groups, and communities achieve common goals, thus contributing to poverty reduction.
This paper seeks to identify the factors which are responsible for successful management of natural resources when communities are given opportunities to manage those resources.
Escaping poverty traps?
This paper introduces and applies an analytical framework to study how formal and informal institutions influence socio-economic change and poverty reduction in rural Cambodia, giving specific reference to property rights and collective action.
Property rights, collective Action, and poverty
This paper presents a conceptual framework on how institutions of property rights and collective action can contribute to poverty reduction, including through external interventions and action by poor people themselves.
Linking collective action to non-timber forest product market for improved local livelihoods
The paper draws on findings from research in South Sulawesi and Jambi Provinces, Indonesia, looking at the role of collective action in helping two local community groups enhance their bargaining power vis a vis other market players (such as colle
The global agricultural economy is changing. Commodity prices are declining, and producers increasingly supply complex value chains. There is growing interest in how farmers can benefit from emerging market opportunities.
Empowerment through technology
This paper explores how and to what extent women and men have benefited from the build-up of social capital in technology uptake, and the role of women in this process.
Minor millets are examples of underutilized plant species, being locally important but rarely traded internationally with an unexploited economic potential.
The role of well-functioning markets for development is now widely recognized, however the challenge remains to make these markets benefit the poor and the environment.
TA mixed-methods, multiple-stage approach was used to obtain data on how gender and wealth affected participation in community groups in Meru, Kenya, and how men and women farmers obtain and diffuse agricultural information.
Gender and collective action
This paper presents a framework for investigating the intersection of collective action and gender; i.e.
Beyond group ranch subdivision
This paper leverages datasets and results from two separate studies carried out across eight Kajiado group ranches and offers a unique opportunity to look at emergent pre- and postsubdivision trends from an interdisciplinary framework that combine
Could payments for environmental services improve rangeland management in Central Asia, West Asia and North Africa?
Although several institutional and management approaches that address the degradation of the rangelands have been tested in the dry areas of Central and West Asia and North Africa (CWANA), impact has been limited.
There are some apparently successful cases of collective marketing with staple food commodities (grains and root crops), but these are less common than cases involving higher value agricultural products.
The Andean highlands are home to some of the poorest rural households in South America. Native potato varieties and local knowledge for their cultivation and use are unique resources possessed by farmers in these areas.
The many meanings of collective action
Collective action in agriculture and natural resource management is all too often perceived of in terms of the mere number of participants, with little consideration given to who participates, why, and the outcomes of inequitable participation.
"Genetic erosion in animal genetic resources (AnGR) is of concern where livelihoods of the poor are affected and option values for society are being lost.