Keyword | Page | Issue |
Advisory and extension services | ||
Rural advisory services – back on the development agenda! | 6 | 1/2014 |
Clients and advisers, groups and networks – Clarifying roles in extension processes | 9 | 1/2014 |
Malawi – case study of a system of pluralistic extension and advisory services | 12 | 1/2014 |
Sustainably financing extension services | 16 | 1/2014 |
Management advice for family farms: an innovative approach rooted in farmer realities | 19 | 1/2014 |
Modern ICTs and rural extension: Have we reached the tipping point? | 22 | 1/2014 |
Biovisions’s Farmer Communication Programme: a circular knowledge dissemination system | 25 | 1/2014 |
Farmer-to-farmer knowledge exchange – farmer shows in Cambodia | 28 | 1/2014 |
Africa Harvest: Combining research and rural extension to the benefit of small farmers | 30 | 1/2014 |
A (women)farmer-first approach – a case study from Papua New Guinea | 33 | 1/2014 |
Agriculture | ||
“Zero pesticide” vegetables for the Indian market | 39 | 1/2014 |
Climate protection in agriculture – opportunity or risk for smallholder farming? | 4 | 2/2014 |
RISE – Measuring sustainability in agriculture | 27 | 2/2014 |
Biodiversity | ||
Combining poverty alleviation, biodiversity protection and land rehabilitation: The “Green charcoal chain” in Madagascar | 36 | 1/2014 |
Agricultural biodiversity: the foundation of resilient family farms | 24 | 2/2014 |
Bioeconomy | ||
Bioeconomy and sustainable development – dimensionsBioeconomy and sustainable development – dimensions | 6 | 3/2014 |
Bioeconomy strategies across the globe | 10 | 3/2014 |
Research: Global co-operation for locally optimised solutions | 14 | 3/2014 |
Biomass-based value webs – benefits for the South | 16 | 3/2014 |
Tailoring the bioeconomy to food security | 19 | 3/2014 |
“To make the change happen, the key is to work together in partnerships” | 22 | 3/2014 |
More than just mediators | 24 | 3/2014 |
Global Bioenergy Partnership: working together for sustainable development | 27 | 3/2014 |
Increasing resource efficiency by cascading use of biomass | 28 | 3/2014 |
Cassava – how to explore the “all-sufficient” | 30 | 3/2014 |
Is Africa “ready” for an integrated bioeconomy approach? | 32 | 3/2014 |
Bioeconomy – a dead end | 34 | 3/2014 |
Bioenergy | ||
FlexiBiogas – a climate change adaptation and mitigation technology | 35 | 2/2014 |
Global Bioenergy Partnership: working together for sustainable development | 27 | 3/2014 |
China’s biomass energy development – a perception change from waste to resource | 38 | 4/2014 |
Climate change | ||
Climate protection in agriculture – opportunity or risk for smallholder farming? | 4 | 2/2014 |
FlexiBiogas – a climate change adaptation and mitigation technology | 35 | 2/2014 |
What is needed for reducing the greenhouse gas footprint? | 31 | 4/2014 |
Environment | ||
Rebuilding soil natural capital – an example from Kuwait | 38 | 2/2014 |
Family farming | ||
Family farming: let’s forget ideology | 4 | 1/2014 |
“Family farms are key to feeding the world” – Interview with FAO Director- General José Graziano da Silva | 6 | 2/2014 |
More than just a business | 8 | 2/2014 |
What is so special about family farms? | 11 | 2/2014 |
Consolidating achievements and addressing new challenges related to family farming in the Mercosur | 14 | 2/2014 |
Women – the untapped potential for food security | 17 | 2/2014 |
“We have inherited not only a piece of land, but also the responsibility to turn it into a home” | 23 | 2/2014 |
Machinery rings – a mechanisation concept for African farmers? | 24 | 2/2014 |
Agricultural biodiversity: the foundation of resilient family farms | 26 | 2/2014 |
RISE – Measuring sustainability in agriculture | 27 | 2/2014 |
Family farming – a model with a future? | 29 | 2/2014 |
Unleashing the potential of family farming with the Enabling Rural Innovation Approach | 41 | 4/2014 |
Finance | ||
Sustainably financing extension services | 16 | 1/2014 |
Food security | ||
Tailoring the bioeconomy to food security | 30 | 2/2013 |
Niger: Mr Issoufou and the fight against hunger | 21 | 3/2013 |
Food security and poverty mitigation through smallholder dairy – the Zambian case | ||
Food security | ||
Better income through improved milk hygiene standards – an example from North Somalia | 19 | 3/2014 |
Rangelands – sound management strategies for a vulnerable resource | 38 | 3/2014 |
Revival for Zimbabwe’s meat market | 26 | 4/2014 |
Health | ||
Improving healthcare through ICT for India’s rural women: eASHA in Rajasthan | 41 | 3/2014 |
ICT | ||
Modern ICTs and rural extension: Have we reached the tipping point? | 22 | 1/2014 |
Improving healthcare through ICT for India’s rural women: eASHA in Rajasthan | 41 | 3/2014 |
Livestock | ||
Livestock matter | 6 | 4/2014 |
Livestock: recyclers that promote the sustainability of smallholder farms | 9 | 4/2014 |
Tropical forage-based systems for climatesmart livestock production in Latin America | 12 | 4/2014 |
Pasture management in Central Asia – regional learning for reform | 16 | 4/2014 |
Pastoralism and conflict – two sides of a coin? | 19 | 4/2014 |
Linking poor livestock keepers to markets | 22 | 4/2014 |
Milk production pays off! – Experiences of a DPPP approach in Northern Sri Lanka | 25 | 4/2014 |
Food security and poverty mitigation through smallholder dairy – the Zambian case | 26 | 4/2014 |
Animal husbandry in cities – using potentials, reducing risks | 28 | 4/2014 |
What is needed for reducing the greenhouse gas footprint? | 31 | 4/2014 |
The insatiable hunger for cheap meat | 34 | 4/2014 |
Mindsets for sustainability – let’s start with feed! | 36 | |
Marketing / Markets | ||
“Zero pesticide” vegetables for the Indian market | 39 | 1/2014 |
Boosting commercial sorghum production and marketing with the „aggregator model“ | 40 | 2/2014 |
Linking poor livestock keepers to markets | 22 | 4/2014 |
Private sector / PPPs | ||
“To make the change happen, the key is to work together in partnerships” | 22 | 3/2014 |
More than just mediators | 24 | 3/2014 |
Cooperation with the private sector – Development engine for small-scale farmers | 36 | 3/2014 |
Cooperation with the private sector – Perilous partnerships | 37 | 3/2014 |
Rural development | ||
Combining poverty alleviation, biodiversity protection and land rehabilitation: The “Green charcoal chain” in Madagascar | 36 | 1/2014 |
Integrated watershed management – an approach with a number of stumbling blocks | 32 | 2/2014 |
Boosting commercial sorghum production and marketing with the „aggregator model“ | 40 | 2/2014 |
Niger: Mr Issoufou and the fight against hunger | 38 | 3/2014 |
Milk production pays off! – Experiences of a DPPP approach in Northern Sri Lanka | 25 | 4/2014 |
Unleashing the potential of family farming with the Enabling Rural Innovation Approach | 41 | 4/2014 |
Rural women | ||
Empowering rural women in India – it’s high time! | 34 | 1/2014 |
Women – the untapped potential for food security | 17 | 2/2014 |
Improving healthcare through ICT for India’s rural women: eASHA in Rajasthan | 41 | 3/2014 |
Water | ||
Integrated watershed management – an approach with a number of stumbling blocks | 32 | 2/2014 |