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Now showing items 1-10 of 12
Grassroots innovations for survival
(2000-10-15)
Although participation is much discussed, poor people rarely get the opportunity to develop their
own agenda and vision or set terms for the involvement of outsiders. The entire participatory
paradigm illustrates that ...
Potter's wheel
(2005-07-20)
Honey bee: a voice of creative farmers, artisans, pastoralists and other grassroots innovation
(1995-10-05)
With this issue, we complete five years. Five years in the
life of a journal of this kind are just sufficient to move from
a crawling to walking stage. With your continued support,
we are sure that the newsletter will ...
Unsung heroes
(2010-04-29)
Neem-Mania, what else?
(1995-10-06)
Poverty abounds in Biodiversity - rich areas
(1992-10-01)
PEOPLE who live in areas prone to droughts, floods and cyclones or amidst hills and forests have
developed lifestyles best suited to their natural resources, thereby enriching the biodiversity of their
areas.
Diversity ...
Water wisdom and wars farming matters
(2010-09-07)
Alongside the large-scale floods that fill the news these days, millions of hectares and people around the world are being affected by drought, with large areas suffering from serve brought and fires the current tenor of ...
Seduce the Scientist
(2009-04-29)
There is worldwide indifference among formal and institutional
scientists about local knowledge and people’s
ability to solve problems. This indifference has only increased
by the use of short cut methods of learning, ...
The honey bee network: voices from grassroots innovators
(1996-07-15)
An assumption behind most approaches to the alleviation of poverty is that poor people are
too poor to be able to think and plan on their own. The result is that most interventions are
designed by others: civil servants, ...