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Book (stand-alone)A rapid geospatial analysis of Nampula and Cabo Delgado provinces in Mozambique 2022
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No results found.This report was prepared by the FAO’s Geospatial unit in the Land and Water Division (NSL) with financial support from SFERA Needs Assessment and Programme Development Window (SFERA GLO 301 MUL - Baby 91). This report was made possible thanks to the contribution from Hernani Coelho Da Silva (FAO Representative in Mozambique), Claudia Pereira (Assistant FAO Representative Programme), Tatenda Mutenga (Deputy Head of Field Office-Pemba), Custodio Amaral (Assessment Specialist), Alexa Caesar (Program Specialist-Planning and Resource Mobilisation), Carla Cuambe (Senior National Environment and Natural Resources Program Officer), and Manuel Daniel (National Project Coordinator) for their review and comments that helped improve the publication and Orlando Macave (MRV/REDD+ Technician) and Aristides Muhate (MRV Coordinator) from the National Sustainable Development Fund (FNDS) for sharing the 2016 Land Cover dataset for Mozambique. -
ProjectGeospatial analysis of land availability and accessibility in Cabo Delgado and Nampula provinces of Mozambique 2023
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Book (series)Final evaluation of the project “Securing tenure rights for forest landscape-dependent communities: linking science with policy to advance tenure security, sustainable forest management and people’s livelihoods”. Main report
GCP/GLO/806/GFF GEF ID: 5797
2019Also available in:
No results found.Peru is among the world’s ten mega-diverse countries, Indonesia’s rainforests shelter almost 20 percent of the world’s plant, mammal and bird species, while Uganda forests are home to about 7.5 percent of mammal and 10.2 percent of global bird species, and support the world’s highest number of primate species. Unclear tenure and conflicts are the major factors in deforestation of forest areas targeted by the project implemented by FAO, aimed at securing tenure rights for forest landscape-dependent communities: linking science with policy to advance tenure security, sustainable forest Management and people’s livelihoods. Which results achieved the project, and what are the lessons that can be replicated? To what extent were government institutions and indigenous communities empowered by the project to develop and implement policies and projects that support tenure security, livelihoods and sustainable forest management? These are just some of the questions answered in this evaluation.
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