Institutional implications of governance of local common pool resources on livestock water productivity in Ethiopia
Improving water productivity depends on how local communal water and grazing resources are governed. This involves institutional and organizational issues. In the mixed farming systems of the Amhara Regional State, Ethiopia, non-participatory water users’ associations, neglect of traditional water r...
| Main Authors: | , , |
|---|---|
| Format: | Journal Article |
| Language: | Inglés |
| Published: |
Cambridge University Press
2011
|
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/3057 |
Similar Items: Institutional implications of governance of local common pool resources on livestock water productivity in Ethiopia
- Common pool resources
- Common-pool resources, livelihoods, and resilience: Critical challenges for governance in Cambodia
- Three ways to improve livestock water productivity in Ethiopia
- Common-pool resources-a challenge for local governance: Experimental research in eight villages in the Mekong Delta of Cambodia and Vietnam
- Synthesizing research on pastoral governance of common-pool resources, 1 - 4 February 2021
- Neither market nor state: governance of common-pool resources in the twenty-first century