Similar Items: Geographic space, assets, livelihoods and well-being in rural Central America: empirical evidence from Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua
- Geography, livelihoods and rural poverty in Honduras: An empirical analysis using an asset-base approach
- Geography, livelihoods and rural poverty in Honduras: An empirical analysis using an asset-base approach
- Understanding the drivers of sustainable rural growth and poverty reduction in Honduras
- Comprender los motores del crecimiento rural sostenible y la lucha contra la pobreza en Honduras
- Identifying the drivers of sustainable rural growth and poverty reduction in Honduras
- Pathways of rural development in Madagascar: an empirical investigation of the critical triangle of environmental sustainability, economic growth, and poverty alleviation
Author: Alwang, Jeffrey
- Improved potato varieties in the Center of Origin (Peru): adoption determinants and impacts.
- Impacts of improved bean varieties on poverty and food security in Uganda and Rwanda
- Policy for plenty: measuring the benefits of policy-oriented social science research
- The impact of the International Food Policy Research Institute's research program on rural finance policies for food security for the poor
- Productivity and land enhancing technologies in Northern Ethiopia: health, public investments, and sequential adoption
- The role of impact assessment in evaluating agricultural R&D
Author: Jansen, Hans G. P.
- Geography, livelihoods and rural poverty in Honduras: An empirical analysis using an asset-base approach
- Geographic space, assets, livelihoods and well-being in rural Central America: empirical evidence from Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua
- Concentracion de la inversión publica en las zonas rurales de Centroamerica
- Motores de crecimiento rural sostenible y reducción de la pobreza en Centroamerica: estudio de caso de Honduras
- Geography, livelihoods and rural poverty in Honduras: An empirical analysis using an asset-base approach
- Rural development policies and sustainable land use in the hillside areas of Honduras: a quantitative livelihoods approach