Similar Items: Scalar politics, power struggles and institutional emergence in Daw Lar Lake, Myanmar
- Scalar disconnect: the logic of transboundary water governance in the Mekong
- Scalar Disconnect: The logic of transboundary water governance in the Mekong
- Negotiating transitions in water rights
- The politics of legal pluralism in the shaping of spatial power in Myanmar’s land governance
- Editorial: accommodating multiple interests in local forest management
- State expectations and local interests: the context for irrigation management transfer in Nepal
Author: Suhardiman, Diana
- Process-focused analysis in transboundary water governance research
- Adaptation’s thirst: accelerating the convergence of water and climate action. Background paper prepared for the 2019 report of the Global Commission on Adaptation
- Environmental impact assessment: theory, practice and implications for Mekong hydropower debate
- Payments for ecosystem services in Hoa Binh province, Vietnam: an institutional analysis
- Reshaping upland farming policies to support nature and livelihoods: lessons from soil erosion in Southeast Asia with emphasis on Lao PDR. [Report of the Management of Soil Erosion Consortium (MSEC) Project]
- Bureaucratic reform in irrigation: a review of four case studies
Author: Scurrah, N.
- Scalar politics, power struggles and institutional emergence in Daw Lar Lake, Myanmar
- Institutional bricolage and the (re)shaping of communal land tenure arrangements: two contrasting cases in upland and lowland northeastern Laos
- Farmer’s agency and institutional bricolage in land use plan implementation in upland Laos