Ecodevelopment in Tanzania: an empirical contribution on needs, self-sufficiency, and environmentally-sound agriculture on peasant farms

The local and economic feasibility of applying ecological production patterns in tropical African highlands is analysed by using peasant's crop and farm budgets as a basis. It investigates risk minimizing, that is, raising cash crop. The most important cash crops are vegetables, coffee and tea. The most important subsistence crops are maize, bean, banana, sweet potato and cassava. The case study (Shashui area in Lushoto distric, Tanga region, Tanzania) is linked to general ecodevelopment theory and policy. The goal of the study is to ascertain the social and economic conditions governing the introduction of ecologically-oriented agricultural production and to evaluate how useful this would be. (ATA 12(7):59277. 1987)

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: 71991 Glaeser, B.
Format: biblioteca
Published: Mouton, Berlin (Alemania, R.F.) 1984
Subjects:COFFEA, CULTIVOS COMERCIALES, EXPLOTACION EN PEQUEÑA ESCALA, CAMBIO TECNOLOGICO, SOCIOLOGIA ECONOMICA, TANZANIA, CAMELLIA SINENSIS, ZEA MAYS, MUSA, IPOMOEA BATATAS,
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id KOHA-OAI-BVE:79343
record_format koha
spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:793432020-02-03T21:46:45ZEcodevelopment in Tanzania: an empirical contribution on needs, self-sufficiency, and environmentally-sound agriculture on peasant farms 71991 Glaeser, B. Mouton, Berlin (Alemania, R.F.)1984The local and economic feasibility of applying ecological production patterns in tropical African highlands is analysed by using peasant's crop and farm budgets as a basis. It investigates risk minimizing, that is, raising cash crop. The most important cash crops are vegetables, coffee and tea. The most important subsistence crops are maize, bean, banana, sweet potato and cassava. The case study (Shashui area in Lushoto distric, Tanga region, Tanzania) is linked to general ecodevelopment theory and policy. The goal of the study is to ascertain the social and economic conditions governing the introduction of ecologically-oriented agricultural production and to evaluate how useful this would be. (ATA 12(7):59277. 1987)The local and economic feasibility of applying ecological production patterns in tropical African highlands is analysed by using peasant's crop and farm budgets as a basis. It investigates risk minimizing, that is, raising cash crop. The most important cash crops are vegetables, coffee and tea. The most important subsistence crops are maize, bean, banana, sweet potato and cassava. The case study (Shashui area in Lushoto distric, Tanga region, Tanzania) is linked to general ecodevelopment theory and policy. The goal of the study is to ascertain the social and economic conditions governing the introduction of ecologically-oriented agricultural production and to evaluate how useful this would be. (ATA 12(7):59277. 1987)COFFEACULTIVOS COMERCIALESEXPLOTACION EN PEQUEÑA ESCALACAMBIO TECNOLOGICOSOCIOLOGIA ECONOMICATANZANIACAMELLIA SINENSISZEA MAYSMUSAIPOMOEA BATATAS
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
topic COFFEA
CULTIVOS COMERCIALES
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUEÑA ESCALA
CAMBIO TECNOLOGICO
SOCIOLOGIA ECONOMICA
TANZANIA
CAMELLIA SINENSIS
ZEA MAYS
MUSA
IPOMOEA BATATAS
COFFEA
CULTIVOS COMERCIALES
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUEÑA ESCALA
CAMBIO TECNOLOGICO
SOCIOLOGIA ECONOMICA
TANZANIA
CAMELLIA SINENSIS
ZEA MAYS
MUSA
IPOMOEA BATATAS
spellingShingle COFFEA
CULTIVOS COMERCIALES
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUEÑA ESCALA
CAMBIO TECNOLOGICO
SOCIOLOGIA ECONOMICA
TANZANIA
CAMELLIA SINENSIS
ZEA MAYS
MUSA
IPOMOEA BATATAS
COFFEA
CULTIVOS COMERCIALES
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUEÑA ESCALA
CAMBIO TECNOLOGICO
SOCIOLOGIA ECONOMICA
TANZANIA
CAMELLIA SINENSIS
ZEA MAYS
MUSA
IPOMOEA BATATAS
71991 Glaeser, B.
Ecodevelopment in Tanzania: an empirical contribution on needs, self-sufficiency, and environmentally-sound agriculture on peasant farms
description The local and economic feasibility of applying ecological production patterns in tropical African highlands is analysed by using peasant's crop and farm budgets as a basis. It investigates risk minimizing, that is, raising cash crop. The most important cash crops are vegetables, coffee and tea. The most important subsistence crops are maize, bean, banana, sweet potato and cassava. The case study (Shashui area in Lushoto distric, Tanga region, Tanzania) is linked to general ecodevelopment theory and policy. The goal of the study is to ascertain the social and economic conditions governing the introduction of ecologically-oriented agricultural production and to evaluate how useful this would be. (ATA 12(7):59277. 1987)
format
topic_facet COFFEA
CULTIVOS COMERCIALES
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUEÑA ESCALA
CAMBIO TECNOLOGICO
SOCIOLOGIA ECONOMICA
TANZANIA
CAMELLIA SINENSIS
ZEA MAYS
MUSA
IPOMOEA BATATAS
author 71991 Glaeser, B.
author_facet 71991 Glaeser, B.
author_sort 71991 Glaeser, B.
title Ecodevelopment in Tanzania: an empirical contribution on needs, self-sufficiency, and environmentally-sound agriculture on peasant farms
title_short Ecodevelopment in Tanzania: an empirical contribution on needs, self-sufficiency, and environmentally-sound agriculture on peasant farms
title_full Ecodevelopment in Tanzania: an empirical contribution on needs, self-sufficiency, and environmentally-sound agriculture on peasant farms
title_fullStr Ecodevelopment in Tanzania: an empirical contribution on needs, self-sufficiency, and environmentally-sound agriculture on peasant farms
title_full_unstemmed Ecodevelopment in Tanzania: an empirical contribution on needs, self-sufficiency, and environmentally-sound agriculture on peasant farms
title_sort ecodevelopment in tanzania: an empirical contribution on needs, self-sufficiency, and environmentally-sound agriculture on peasant farms
publisher Mouton, Berlin (Alemania, R.F.)
publishDate 1984
work_keys_str_mv AT 71991glaeserb ecodevelopmentintanzaniaanempiricalcontributiononneedsselfsufficiencyandenvironmentallysoundagricultureonpeasantfarms
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