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People, livelihoods and decision making in catchment management: A case study from Tanzania

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People, livelihoods and decision making in catchment management: A case study from Tanzania. / Franks, Tom; Cleaver, Frances.
In: Waterlines, Vol. 20, No. 3, 26.03.2002, p. 7-10.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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@article{e1e0ec1a6ed449f9acce29e3ec0ec379,
title = "People, livelihoods and decision making in catchment management: A case study from Tanzania",
abstract = "This paper illustrates the complexity of catchment water management and the importance of understanding the context of economic, political and cultural aspects of livelihoods in a catchment. Issues highlighted include the need for institutions which cross resource boundaries, ways of including those stakeholders usually excluded from decision-making processes, and the importance of livelihood constraints on people's participation in resource management.",
author = "Tom Franks and Frances Cleaver",
year = "2002",
month = mar,
day = "26",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "7--10",
journal = "Waterlines",
issn = "0262-8104",
publisher = "Intermediate Technology Publications Ltd",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - People, livelihoods and decision making in catchment management

T2 - A case study from Tanzania

AU - Franks, Tom

AU - Cleaver, Frances

PY - 2002/3/26

Y1 - 2002/3/26

N2 - This paper illustrates the complexity of catchment water management and the importance of understanding the context of economic, political and cultural aspects of livelihoods in a catchment. Issues highlighted include the need for institutions which cross resource boundaries, ways of including those stakeholders usually excluded from decision-making processes, and the importance of livelihood constraints on people's participation in resource management.

AB - This paper illustrates the complexity of catchment water management and the importance of understanding the context of economic, political and cultural aspects of livelihoods in a catchment. Issues highlighted include the need for institutions which cross resource boundaries, ways of including those stakeholders usually excluded from decision-making processes, and the importance of livelihood constraints on people's participation in resource management.

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:0036121611

VL - 20

SP - 7

EP - 10

JO - Waterlines

JF - Waterlines

SN - 0262-8104

IS - 3

ER -