Chapter: 1 (Page no: 3)
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Figments of fire and forest: shifting cultivation policy in the Philippines and Indonesia.
Author(s):
Ploeg, J. van der
Persoon, G. A.
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Chapter: 2 (Page no: 27)
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Shifting cultivation policies in Southeast Asia: a need to work with, rather than against, smallholder farmers.
Author(s):
Mertz, O.
Bruun, T. B.
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Chapter: 3 (Page no: 43)
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Policies impacting shifting cultivation: getting them right.
Author(s):
Falvey, J. L.
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Chapter: 5 (Page no: 90)
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Tenure and shifting cultivation.
Author(s):
Weinstock, J. A.
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Chapter: 6 (Page no: 97)
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The geopolitics of shifting cultivation in Thailand: a brief history of the 'hill tribe problem'.
Author(s):
McKinnon, K.
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Chapter: 7 (Page no: 113)
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The French colonial administration versus swidden cultivation: from political discourse to coercive policies in French Indochina.
Author(s):
Guérin, M.
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Chapter: 8 (Page no: 129)
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Lao swidden farmers: from self-initiated mobility to permanent-settlement trends imposed by policy, 1830 to 2000.
Author(s):
Chazée, L.
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Chapter: 9 (Page no: 157)
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Romanticizing and villainizing shifting cultivators within national policies: co-producing ethnic politics and resource-use legitimacy in Thailand's community forestry debate.
Author(s):
Forsyth, T.
Walker, A.
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Chapter: 10 (Page no: 174)
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Conservation and restoration of traditional grasslands in the Mount Aso region of Kyushu, Japan: the role of collaborative management and public policy support.
Author(s):
Takahashi, Y.
Neef, A.
Yokogawa, H.
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Chapter: 11 (Page no: 194)
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The viability of swidden agriculture and its uncertain role in REDD+.
Author(s):
Ziegler, A. D.
Borstein, D.
Yuen JiaQi
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Chapter: 12 (Page no: 207)
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Involving all local stakeholders and holders of land-use rights in REDD+: indigenous people and/or local communities in Indonesia.
Author(s):
Royer, S. de
Visser, L. E.
Noordwijk, M. van
Galudra, G.
Pradhan, U.
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Chapter: 13 (Page no: 226)
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Rethinking swidden cultivation in Myanmar: policies for sustainable upland livelihoods and food security.
Author(s):
Springate-Baginski, O.
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Chapter: 14 (Page no: 242)
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Swidden agriculture under threat: the case of Ratanakiri, northeast Cambodia: opportunities and constraints from the national policy environment.
Author(s):
Ironside, J.
Paterson, G.
Thomas, A.
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Chapter: 15 (Page no: 269)
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The growing voice of the state in the fallows of Laos.
Author(s):
Ducourtieux, O.
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Chapter: 16 (Page no: 295)
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Swidden agriculture and sloping land conversion in China's Dulong Valley: impact and adaptation.
Author(s):
Shen ShiCai
Li DiYu
Zhang FuDou
Xu GaoFeng
Wilkes, A.
Yin Lun
Jin GuiMei
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Chapter: 17 (Page no: 310)
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Policies on shifting cultivation in the countries of the eastern Himalayas.
Author(s):
Phuntsho, K.
Rawat, G. S.
Rasul, G.
Wu Ning
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Chapter: 18 (Page no: 344)
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Reflections on the impacts of state policies on shifting cultivators in northeast India.
Author(s):
Darlong, V.
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Chapter: 19 (Page no: 379)
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Vanishing shifting cultivation and loss of tribal culture in Arunachal Pradesh, northeastern India.
Author(s):
Riba, T.
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Chapter: 20 (Page no: 393)
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Shifting cultivation on steep slopes of Mizoram, India: impact of policy reforms.
Author(s):
Tripathi, S. K.
Vanlalfakawma, D. C.
Lalnunmawia, F.
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Chapter: 21 (Page no: 414)
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State land policies and shifting cultivation in Odisha, India.
Author(s):
Kundan Kumar
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Chapter: 22 (Page no: 441)
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The dragon and its attempts to put out the fire.
Author(s):
Dukpa, C.
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Chapter: 23 (Page no: 449)
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From farmers to foresters? Response to pine encroachment on former swidden fields in Choekhor Valley, Bumthang district, Bhutan.
Author(s):
Yoder, L. S. M.
Phuntsho, S.
Conrad, A. J.
Doren, H.
Haney, R.
Johantgen, C.
LeBoeuf, K.
Miller, S.
Reich-Aviles, Z.
Ritter, A.
Zegas, G.
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Chapter: 24 (Page no: 460)
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Keeping ecological disturbance on the land: recreating swidden effects in Bhutan.
Author(s):
Siebert, S. F.
Belsky, J. M.
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Chapter: 25 (Page no: 470)
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Shifting cultivation in Vietnam: impacts of various policy reforms.
Author(s):
Catacutan, D.
Nguyen Thi Hoa
Do Trong Hoan
Simelton, E.
Hoang Thi Lua
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Chapter: 26 (Page no: 486)
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Misinterpreting the uplands of Vietnam: how government policies and maps lead to a misunderstanding of swidden and its associated livelihood systems.
Author(s):
Leisz, S. J.
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Chapter: 27 (Page no: 502)
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Changing patterns of shifting cultivation in Timor-Leste.
Author(s):
McArthur, H. J.
Friday, J. B.
Jones, M. J.
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Chapter: 28 (Page no: 518)
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Evolving swidden farming patterns in the Lao PDR: when policy reverses historically mobile ways of life to impose permanently settled livelihoods.
Author(s):
Chazée, L.
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Chapter: 29 (Page no: 542)
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'Your land is needed': the fundamental reason behind the sedentarization of shifting cultivators.
Author(s):
Koninck, R. de
Pham Thanh Hai
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Chapter: 30 (Page no: 555)
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Was Thailand's highland policy misdirected?
Author(s):
Suwannarat, G.
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Chapter: 31 (Page no: 577)
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Opium and shifting cultivation in Laos: state discourses and policies.
Author(s):
Cohen, P. T.
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Chapter: 32 (Page no: 593)
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Eliminating opium from the Lao PDR: impoverishment and threat of resumption of poppy cultivation following 'illusory' eradication.
Author(s):
Ducourtieux, O.
Sacklokham, S.
Doligez, F.
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Chapter: 33 (Page no: 618)
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Giving up fallows and indigenous swiddens in times of global land grabbing.
Author(s):
Leemann, E.
Nikles, B.
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Chapter: 34 (Page no: 636)
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The effects of commercial agriculture and swidden-field privatization in southern Laos.
Author(s):
Srikham, W.
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Chapter: 35 (Page no: 649)
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From traditional subsistence to commercial agriculture: a downward trend towards food insecurity in rural Lao PDR.
Author(s):
Pasicolan, P. N.
Thatheva, S.
Pasicolan, T. J. A.
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Chapter: 36 (Page no: 668)
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Policies, migration and coffee cultivation in Vietnam's central highlands: a case study in Dak Lak province.
Author(s):
Truong Hong
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Chapter: 37 (Page no: 686)
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The Chayanov life cycle in upland villages of Laos: socio-economic differentiation driven by state involvement.
Author(s):
Ducourtieux, O.
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Chapter: 38 (Page no: 702)
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Policy-driven changes in Lisu swiddening: social organization as adaptation to a new economy.
Author(s):
Gillogly, K.
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Chapter: 39 (Page no: 717)
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From a complex to degraded system: laws, customs, market forces and legal pluralism in the Cordillera, northern Philippines.
Author(s):
Prill-Brett, J.
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Chapter: 40 (Page no: 732)
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Vietnam's 'renovation' policies: impacts on upland communities and sustainable forest management.
Author(s):
Tran Thi Thu Ha
Pham Van Dien
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Chapter: 41 (Page no: 750)
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Changes in species distribution and plant resources after the cessation of swidden cultivation in Northern Thailand.
Author(s):
Fukushima, M.
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Chapter: 42 (Page no: 761)
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Top-down or bottom-up? The role of the government and local institutions in regulating shifting cultivation in the Upper Siang district, eastern Himalaya, India.
Author(s):
Karthik Teegalapalli
Aparajita Datta
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Chapter: 43 (Page no: 777)
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Transitional upland rice cropping systems in Northern Thailand: priorities for research and development, on the basis of on-farm crop diagnosis.
Author(s):
Keer, K. van
Trébuil, G.
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Chapter: 44 (Page no: 799)
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Lessons learned in Northern Thailand: twenty years of implementation of highland agricultural development and natural resource management projects.
Author(s):
Hoare, P.
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Chapter: 45 (Page no: 819)
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Putting upland agriculture on the map: the TABI experience in Laos.
Author(s):
Heinimann, A.
Flint, C.
Bernhard, R.
Hett, C.
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Chapter: 46 (Page no: 837)
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Negotiating for community forestry policy: the recognition of damar agroforests in Indonesia.
Author(s):
Herawati, T.
Foresta, H. de
Rohadi, D.
Banjade, M. R.
Fay, C.
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Chapter: 47 (Page no: 857)
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Land law and swidden cultivation: Indonesian adat communities and the struggle for statutory rights.
Author(s):
Minarchek, R. D.
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Chapter: 48 (Page no: 875)
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Existing village regulations for natural resource management: a key entry point for community participation in sustainable management.
Author(s):
Hoare, P.
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Chapter: 49 (Page no: 889)
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Policies that transform shifting cultivation practices: linking multi-stakeholder and participatory processes with knowledge and innovations.
Author(s):
Karki, M. B.
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Chapter: 50 (Page no: 917)
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Codification of customary communal tenure of upland shifting cultivation communities in Myanmar.
Author(s):
Andersen, K. E.
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Chapter: 51 (Page no: 943)
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Shifting cultivation policy decisions that count.
Author(s):
MacDicken, K. G.
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Chapter: 52 (Page no: 952)
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Lessons learned from the identification and implementation of policies affecting shifting cultivation in the Asia-Pacific region: a summary.
Author(s):
Found, W. C.
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