Similar Items: Interdisciplinary research: Benefits and challenges
- Interdisciplinary research: Benefits and challenges
- Qualitative livelihood assessments and quantitative models: Synergy to support livelihoods strategies in the hydropower development context
- Benefit sharing in Mekong Region hydropower: whose benefits count?
- Making index-based flood insurance socially inclusive in Bangladesh: challenges and options
- Will REDD+ work ?: The need for interdisciplinary research to address key challenges
- Irrigation performance and its implications in Cambodia: key findings from two case studies. [Project report prepared by IWMI for Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR) under the project "Investing in Water Management to Improve Productivity of Rice-based Farming Systems in Cambodia"].
Author: Senaratna Sellamuttu, Sonali
- Changes in frigate tuna populations on the south coast of Sri Lanka: evidence of the shifting baseline syndrome from analysis of fisher observations
- CBD 2010 target: a case study of Kolleru Wetland (Ramsar Site), India using remote sensing and GIS
- Groundwater resources in the dry zone of Myanmar: a review of current knowledge
- Fish for whom?: Integrating the management of social complexities into technical investments for inclusive, multi-functional irrigation
- Wetlands and agriculture: a case for integrated water resource management in Sri Lanka
- Interdisciplinary research: Benefits and challenges
Author: Silva, S. de
- Interdisciplinary research: Benefits and challenges
- Interdisciplinary research: Benefits and challenges
- Anicut systems in Sri Lanka: the case of the upper Walawe River Basin [Sri Lanka].
- Private sector actors as ad-hoc decision maker in Mekong hydropower
- Institutions, impact synergies and food security: a methodology with results from the Kala Oya Basin, Sri Lanka