2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.envsci.2005.11.009
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Dynamics of grazing policy and practice: environmental and social impacts in three communal areas of southern Africa

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Cited by 79 publications
(83 citation statements)
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“…The tenure system often determines how land is managed and used and thus is often implicated as a primary driver of degradation [51,52]. For example, in smallholder systems in East Africa, investments in soil fertility are more likely when there is security in tenure or ownership [53].…”
Section: Drivers Of Degradationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The tenure system often determines how land is managed and used and thus is often implicated as a primary driver of degradation [51,52]. For example, in smallholder systems in East Africa, investments in soil fertility are more likely when there is security in tenure or ownership [53].…”
Section: Drivers Of Degradationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the vivid equilibrium debate around the role of grazing on degradation [58,59], there is evidence that the concentration of indigenous populations has led to a high demand for natural resources in former "communal areas". Because of this significant linkage between land tenure and sustainability in the region [60], the success of Zimbabwe's land reform can be measured according to its impact on degradation in transferred farm lands and former communal areas.…”
Section: Environmental Sustainability Of Land Reforms-sustainability mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Local ecological knowledge, the social values, and productive logics involving mobile pastoralism with informal rules for management, local breeding, or common property are at the core of sustainable land management in many drylands (e.g. FernĂĄndez-GimĂ©nez, 2000; Rohde et al, 2006). However, they were frequently seen as unsustainable from the perspective of a western mindset (e.g.…”
Section: A Step Towards a Multidimensional Protocol To Combat Desertimentioning
confidence: 99%