Understanding poverty and sustainability needs livelihood studies that acknowledge heterogeneity at the community and household level. This is particularly true for Latin America where inequality and ethnicity are important aspects of poverty and sustainability. This paper is a detailed examination of the natural resources, socioeconomic assets and livelihood strategies of two Mayan communities of the Mexican State of Yucatán. There were three fundamental objectives: to elucidate the people’s perceptions of poverty, to analyze their resource use and livelihood strategies, and to suggest ways in which access to markets can reduce poverty and enhance sustainable development. Using qualitative and quantitative methodologies, the dominance ...
This paper measures the potential of land to generate income and establishes the contexts under whic...
In a short period of time, Conditional Cash Transfer programs (CCTs) have expanded throughout Latin ...
Over 70% of Mexican farms produce only for self subsistence and lack the necessary economies of scal...
Understanding poverty and sustainability needs livelihood studies that acknowledge heterogeneity at ...
In situations where inequality and ethnicity are important aspects of poverty, policymakers need to ...
While there are different estimates of poverty in Mexico, there is general agreement that poverty is...
The conflated pattern between poverty, rurality, and indigeneity in Mexico signifies drastic inequal...
The rural poverty in Mexico is mainly due to the lack of access to basic services, resources, techno...
This paper is concerned with the problem of poverty in Mexico. Its four objectives are to : i) prese...
Indigenous groups account for over one tenth of Mexico’s population and many of them suffer from con...
Agroecology is increasingly prominent in mainstream rural development discourse. Agroecology uses fe...
The extent to which Latin America can pull itself out of persistent poverty in the foreseeable futur...
Indigenous people in Mexico are most likely to be disadvantaged and live in poverty than nonindigeno...
This paper presents a case study from a Mazahua indigenous community in the rural Highlands of Centr...
Environmental degradation, particularly of land resources, is one of the most important problems aff...
This paper measures the potential of land to generate income and establishes the contexts under whic...
In a short period of time, Conditional Cash Transfer programs (CCTs) have expanded throughout Latin ...
Over 70% of Mexican farms produce only for self subsistence and lack the necessary economies of scal...
Understanding poverty and sustainability needs livelihood studies that acknowledge heterogeneity at ...
In situations where inequality and ethnicity are important aspects of poverty, policymakers need to ...
While there are different estimates of poverty in Mexico, there is general agreement that poverty is...
The conflated pattern between poverty, rurality, and indigeneity in Mexico signifies drastic inequal...
The rural poverty in Mexico is mainly due to the lack of access to basic services, resources, techno...
This paper is concerned with the problem of poverty in Mexico. Its four objectives are to : i) prese...
Indigenous groups account for over one tenth of Mexico’s population and many of them suffer from con...
Agroecology is increasingly prominent in mainstream rural development discourse. Agroecology uses fe...
The extent to which Latin America can pull itself out of persistent poverty in the foreseeable futur...
Indigenous people in Mexico are most likely to be disadvantaged and live in poverty than nonindigeno...
This paper presents a case study from a Mazahua indigenous community in the rural Highlands of Centr...
Environmental degradation, particularly of land resources, is one of the most important problems aff...
This paper measures the potential of land to generate income and establishes the contexts under whic...
In a short period of time, Conditional Cash Transfer programs (CCTs) have expanded throughout Latin ...
Over 70% of Mexican farms produce only for self subsistence and lack the necessary economies of scal...