Personal tools
You are here: Home Library V. Democracy and Governance A. Local Governance 2. Rural Governance
Partner Search

Restrict search to:

About Partner Search

Navigation
 
Document Actions

2. Rural Governance

Up one level
Also see... Environment / Community-based Natural Resource Management by webadmin — last modified 2006-09-21 16:04
 
Also see... Water Resource and Watershed Management by webadmin — last modified 2006-09-21 16:04
 
Also see... Energy / Resources / Extractive Industries / Mining and Natural Gas by webadmin — last modified 2006-09-21 16:04
 
Also see... Monitoring and Evaluation by webadmin — last modified 2006-09-21 16:04
 
Gestión Organizativa de las Agrupaciones Sociales del Lugar by BOLFOR — last modified 2007-06-27 19:59
B O L F O R Proyecto de Manejo Forestal Sostenible Santa Cruz, Octubre, 2002 Es una publicación de la Unidad de Forestería Comunitaria CARTILLA FORESTERIA COMUNITARIA 1.pdf Keyword: es, espanol
Effective Rural Governance by Nancy Stark — last modified 2007-06-24 20:24
This framing paper defines effective governance, explains why governance suddenly in the spotlight, details illustrates eight key principles of effective governance, and poses questions that Rural Governance Initiative. Published by Rural Governance Initiative
Innovations in Rural Governance by Mark Drabenstott — last modified 2007-06-24 20:27
In this 2003 Annual Report, we now turn our attention to the other big challenge facing rural regions: how to claim this new frontier with jurisdictional lines and institutions created for a very different rural economy. Published by CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF RURAL AMERICA Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, January 2004
Rural Governance and Citizenship in post-1994 South Africa: Democracy Compromised? by Lungisile Ntsebeza — last modified 2007-06-24 20:29
I [Dr. Ntsebeza ] argue that the promulgation of the Traditional Leadership and Governance Framework Act and the Communal Land Rights Bill (CLRB) runs the risk of compromising this project. The Framework Act establishes traditional councils which are dominated by unelected traditional authorities and their appointees, while the CLRB gives these structures unprecedented powers over land administration and allocation.By Lungisile Ntsebeza (Phd) Associate Professor Department of Sociology University of Cape Town South Africa ntsebeza@humanities.uct.ac.za.
Requirements

Browsers:

  • Microsoft Internet Explorer 5+, Mozilla Firefox 1+, Safari 2+ are supported.
  • Macintosh Internet Explorer and early versions of Safari are not supported.

To view content you may need:

 

Powered by Plone, the Open Source Content Management System

This site conforms to the following standards: