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Library ResourceJanuary, 2016Kenya
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Library ResourceJanuary, 2016Kenya
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Library ResourceJanuary, 2016Kenya
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Library ResourceJanuary, 2016Kenya
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Library ResourceReports & ResearchNovember, 2016Kenya
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Library ResourceJournal Articles & BooksDecember, 2016Kenya, Sub-Saharan Africa
The paper examines the pace of land acquisitions in terms of creating legislative and policy options to safeguard local communities that are directly affected, including compensation for land that is taken, and protecting community interests in the socio-economic and environmental continuum of investment projects, from design to implementation. The absence or weakness of formal landholding and land registration systems was evident in most research sites in Isiolo and Lamu.
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Library ResourcePolicy Papers & BriefsOctober, 2016Kenya, Sub-Saharan Africa
High levels of poverty and a predominantly rural population raise questions of vulnerability to manipulation during large scale land acquisitions in Kenya. Exposure to negative impacts are inherent where social and environmental safeguards are not deployed to protect the people impacted by involuntary displacement. This brief looks into social, economic and environmental safeguards for communities as the state undertakes compulsory land acquisition for investment purposes, part of the country's main development policy, Vision 2030.
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Library Resource
Land Use Policy Volume 50
Peer-reviewed publicationJanuary, 2016KenyaThe extent to which REDD+ initiatives should be a mechanism to address poverty and provide other co-benefits apart from carbon storage, is hotly debated. Here, we examine the benefit distribution policy and practice of a prominent REDD+ project in Kenya with the aim of understanding the extent to which it addresses equity.
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Library Resource
Land Use Policy Volume 51
Peer-reviewed publicationFebruary, 2016KenyaConservation is a fundamentally spatial pursuit. Human–elephant conflict (HEC), in particular crop-raiding, is a significant and complex conservation problem wherever elephants and people occupy the same space. Conservationists and wildlife managers build electrified fences as a technical solution to this problem. Fences provide a spatial means of controlling human–elephant interactions by creating a place for elephants and a place for cultivation. They are often planned and designed based on the ecology of the target species.
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Library ResourceReports & ResearchDecember, 2016Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Kenya, Niger, Tanzania, Western Africa, Eastern Africa
We created a matrix of restoration options for each country, including potential benefits of the technologies and possible constraints.
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