Small-scale woodland-based enterprises with outstanding economic potential: the case of honey in Zambia

In some countries, honey and beeswax are so important the term ‘beekeeping’ appears in the titles of some government ministries. The significance of honey and beeswax in local livelihoods is nowhere more apparent than in the Miombo woodlands of southern Africa. Bee-keeping is a vital source of incom...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mickels-Kokwe, G.
Format: Libro
Language:Inglés
Published: Center for International Forestry Research 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19555
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author Mickels-Kokwe, G.
author_browse Mickels-Kokwe, G.
author_facet Mickels-Kokwe, G.
author_sort Mickels-Kokwe, G.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In some countries, honey and beeswax are so important the term ‘beekeeping’ appears in the titles of some government ministries. The significance of honey and beeswax in local livelihoods is nowhere more apparent than in the Miombo woodlands of southern Africa. Bee-keeping is a vital source of income for many poor and remote rural producers throughout the Miombo, often because it is highly suited to small scale farming. This detailed Non-Timber Forest Product study from Zambia examines beekeeping’s livelihood role from a range of perspectives, including market factors, production methods and measures for harnessing beekeeping to help reduce poverty.The key aim of the study is to generate sufficient information and discussion on the bee-keeping or honey and beeswax industry to support efforts by government of Zambia to develop a beekeeping policy. The report presents initial findings from the beekeeping sector review. The report is structured as follows: Section 1 provides a general introduction, briefly describes the methodology used in the study, and outlines the critical questions, hypotheses and methodology. Section 2 discusses the bio-physical conditions for beekeeping and its relation to forest management. Section 3 provides an overview of the history of beekeeping, the commodity system, sector stakeholders and summarises the characteristics of the beekeeping industry in four case study Provinces, North-Western, Luapula, Central and Eastern Provinces. Section 4 gives insights into the honey marketing chain, from the primary producer to the exporter. Conclusions and recommendations are discussed in Section 5 and 6 respectively.
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spelling CGSpace195552025-01-24T14:20:25Z Small-scale woodland-based enterprises with outstanding economic potential: the case of honey in Zambia Mickels-Kokwe, G. small enterprises honey beekeeping commercial beekeeping production processing non-timber forest products woodlands case studies trade state intervention In some countries, honey and beeswax are so important the term ‘beekeeping’ appears in the titles of some government ministries. The significance of honey and beeswax in local livelihoods is nowhere more apparent than in the Miombo woodlands of southern Africa. Bee-keeping is a vital source of income for many poor and remote rural producers throughout the Miombo, often because it is highly suited to small scale farming. This detailed Non-Timber Forest Product study from Zambia examines beekeeping’s livelihood role from a range of perspectives, including market factors, production methods and measures for harnessing beekeeping to help reduce poverty.The key aim of the study is to generate sufficient information and discussion on the bee-keeping or honey and beeswax industry to support efforts by government of Zambia to develop a beekeeping policy. The report presents initial findings from the beekeeping sector review. The report is structured as follows: Section 1 provides a general introduction, briefly describes the methodology used in the study, and outlines the critical questions, hypotheses and methodology. Section 2 discusses the bio-physical conditions for beekeeping and its relation to forest management. Section 3 provides an overview of the history of beekeeping, the commodity system, sector stakeholders and summarises the characteristics of the beekeeping industry in four case study Provinces, North-Western, Luapula, Central and Eastern Provinces. Section 4 gives insights into the honey marketing chain, from the primary producer to the exporter. Conclusions and recommendations are discussed in Section 5 and 6 respectively. 2006 2012-06-04T09:12:30Z 2012-06-04T09:12:30Z Book https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19555 en Open Access Center for International Forestry Research Mickels-Kokwe, G. 2006. Small-scale woodland-based enterprises with outstanding economic potential: the case of honey in Zambia . Bogor, Indonesia, Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR). 82p. ISBN: 979-24-4673-7..
spellingShingle small enterprises
honey
beekeeping
commercial beekeeping
production
processing
non-timber forest products
woodlands
case studies
trade
state intervention
Mickels-Kokwe, G.
Small-scale woodland-based enterprises with outstanding economic potential: the case of honey in Zambia
title Small-scale woodland-based enterprises with outstanding economic potential: the case of honey in Zambia
title_full Small-scale woodland-based enterprises with outstanding economic potential: the case of honey in Zambia
title_fullStr Small-scale woodland-based enterprises with outstanding economic potential: the case of honey in Zambia
title_full_unstemmed Small-scale woodland-based enterprises with outstanding economic potential: the case of honey in Zambia
title_short Small-scale woodland-based enterprises with outstanding economic potential: the case of honey in Zambia
title_sort small scale woodland based enterprises with outstanding economic potential the case of honey in zambia
topic small enterprises
honey
beekeeping
commercial beekeeping
production
processing
non-timber forest products
woodlands
case studies
trade
state intervention
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19555
work_keys_str_mv AT mickelskokweg smallscalewoodlandbasedenterpriseswithoutstandingeconomicpotentialthecaseofhoneyinzambia