The poverty trap concept strongly influences current research and policy on poverty alleviation. Financial or technological inputs intended to push the rural poor out of a poverty trap have had many successes but have also failed unexpectedly with serious ecological and social consequences that can reinforce poverty. Resilience thinking can help to (i) understand how these failures emerge from the complex relationships between humans and the ecosystems on which they depend and (ii) navigate diverse poverty alleviation strategies, such as transformative change, that may instead be required. First, we review commonly observed or assumed social-ecological relationships in rural development contexts, focusing on economic, biophysical, and cultu...
Risk minimization is no longer a sufficient survival strategy for poor people in livelihood systems ...
Understanding the contribution of forests to poverty alleviation and human well-being has never been...
Society faces a number of ongoing and seemingly intractable problems – poverty, homelessness, enviro...
The poverty trap concept strongly influences current research and policy on poverty alleviation. Fin...
The practices related to the growing, harvesting, preparation, and celebration of food over millenni...
The concept of a poverty trap—commonly understood as a self-reinforcing situation beneath an asset t...
Poverty alleviation for smallholders must consider the increasingly varied and intertwined impacts o...
Enhancing resilience capacity holds the key to welfare improvement. While there are assumptions that...
Recent research has demonstrated the multidimensional nature of poverty and the multi-level organiza...
Sustaining natural resource stocks especially those underpinning the capacity to produce food is key...
The document, presented by Christopher B. Barrett, Cornell University, discusses the challenge of im...
Abstract: Poverty traps and resource degradation in the rural tropics appear to have multiple and c...
Conventional models of intervention in agriculture and rural development policies neither gave atten...
Resilience has surged to the forefront of conversations in the increasingly intertwined development ...
There are two broad views as to why people stay poor. One emphasizes differences in fundamentals, su...
Risk minimization is no longer a sufficient survival strategy for poor people in livelihood systems ...
Understanding the contribution of forests to poverty alleviation and human well-being has never been...
Society faces a number of ongoing and seemingly intractable problems – poverty, homelessness, enviro...
The poverty trap concept strongly influences current research and policy on poverty alleviation. Fin...
The practices related to the growing, harvesting, preparation, and celebration of food over millenni...
The concept of a poverty trap—commonly understood as a self-reinforcing situation beneath an asset t...
Poverty alleviation for smallholders must consider the increasingly varied and intertwined impacts o...
Enhancing resilience capacity holds the key to welfare improvement. While there are assumptions that...
Recent research has demonstrated the multidimensional nature of poverty and the multi-level organiza...
Sustaining natural resource stocks especially those underpinning the capacity to produce food is key...
The document, presented by Christopher B. Barrett, Cornell University, discusses the challenge of im...
Abstract: Poverty traps and resource degradation in the rural tropics appear to have multiple and c...
Conventional models of intervention in agriculture and rural development policies neither gave atten...
Resilience has surged to the forefront of conversations in the increasingly intertwined development ...
There are two broad views as to why people stay poor. One emphasizes differences in fundamentals, su...
Risk minimization is no longer a sufficient survival strategy for poor people in livelihood systems ...
Understanding the contribution of forests to poverty alleviation and human well-being has never been...
Society faces a number of ongoing and seemingly intractable problems – poverty, homelessness, enviro...