Forests are crucial to the livelihoods of hundreds of millions of poor people worldwide, but just how important, and for what functions? Can they help lift people out of poverty, or are they mainly useful as gap-fillers and safety nets in response to shocks? Are certain types of forest-tenure and management regimes more favourable than others? And under what conditions can increased integration into forest-product markets help?
Causes and consequences of shifting cultivation and its alternative in the hill tracts of eastern Bangladesh
Governing Africa's Forests in a Globalized World
Relying on nature's pharmacy in rural Burkina Faso: empirical evidence of the determinants of traditional medicine consumption.
Mushrooms in Forests and Woodlands: Resource Management, Values and Local Livelihoods
Forest incomes and poverty alleviation under participatory forest management in the Bale Highlands, Southern Ethiopia
Forests, poverty & rural economic development in Guangxi, China
Economic viability of mushrooms cultivation to poverty reduction in Bangladesh
Market constraints in NTFP trade: household perspectives in Chittagong Hill Tracts of Bangladesh
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