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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12348/2794

    Integrated resources management, integrated agriculture-aquaculture and the African farmer

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    Abstract
    • Despite the expenditure of huge amounts of money and human effort, the Green Revolution has largely failed to benefit the vast majority of the rural poor in Africa: those smallholding farmers who sell little, if any, of what they grow and rely almost entirely upon natural soil fertility, rainfall and traditional broodstock and seed varieties. New approaches on food production and income generation in the rural areas must be found if this sector of agricultural community is to be assisted. Integrated resources management (IRM) in general, and integrated agriculture-aquaculture (IAA) in particular, may offer some solutions in cases where the classical methods of improving farm output have failed and/or been unsustainable.
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    • Sustainable aquaculture [2402]
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    • na_1445.pdf (896.0Kb)
    Date
    • 1995
    Author
    • Brummett, R.E.
    AGROVOC Keywords
    • agriculture; aquaculture; farmers
    Type
    • Journal Article
    Publisher
    • ICLARM
    Metadata
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