Akinnifesi, F. K., Sileshi, G., Ajayi, O. C., Chirwa, P. W., Mng’omba, S., Chakeredza, S., et al. (2008). Domestication and conservation of indigenous Miombo fruit trees for improving rural livelihoods in southern Africa. Biodiversity (Ottawa),
9(1–2), 72–74.
Article
Google Scholar
Alig, R., Latta, G., Adams, D., & McCarl, B. (2010). Mitigating greenhouse gases: The importance of land base interactions between forests, agriculture, and residential development in the face of changes in bioenergy and carbon prices. Forest Policy and Economics,
12(1), 67–75.
Article
Google Scholar
Angelsen, A. (2010). Policies for reduced deforestation and their impact on agricultural production. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America,
107(46), 19639–19644.
CAS
Article
Google Scholar
Angelsen, A., Brockhaus, M., Kanninen, M., Sills, E., Sunderlin, W. D., & Wertz-Kanounnikoff, S. (Eds.). (2009). Realising REDD+: National strategy and policy option. Bogor: Center for International Research in Forestry.
Google Scholar
Angelsen, A., & Kaimowitz, D. (1999). Rethinking the causes of deforestation: Lessons from economic models. The World Bank Research Observer,
14(1), 73–98.
CAS
Article
Google Scholar
Benner, P. (1985). Quality of life: A phenomenological perspective on explanation, prediction, and understanding in nursing. Advances in Nursing Science,
8(1), 1–14.
CAS
Article
Google Scholar
Bluffstone, R. A. (1995). The effects of labor-market performance on deforestation in developing-countries under open access: An example from rural Nepal. Journal of Environmental Economics and Management,
29(1), 42–63.
Article
Google Scholar
Bond, I., Chambwera, M., Jones, B., Chundama, M., & Nhantumbo, I. (2010). REDD+ in dryland forests: Issues and prospects for pro-poor REDD in the miombo wooldands of southern Africa. Natural resource issues no. 21. London: IIED.
Brundtland, G. H. (1987). Our common future. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Google Scholar
Bryant, R. L. (1992). Political ecology: An emerging research agenda in third-world studies. Political Geography,
11(1), 12–36.
Article
Google Scholar
Campbell, B. M., Luckert, M., & Scoones, I. (1997). Local-level valuation of Savanna resources: A case study from Zimbabwe. Economic Botany,
51(1), 59–77.
Article
Google Scholar
Central Statistics Office. (2005). Living conditions monitoring survey report 2004. Lusaka: Central Statistics Office.
Google Scholar
Chandra, A., & Idrisova, A. (2011). Convention on Biological Diversity: A review of national challenges and opportunities for implementation. Biodiversity and Conservation,
20(14), 3295–3316.
Article
Google Scholar
Chasek, P. S. (2010). Confronting environmental treaty implementation challenges in the Pacific Islands. East-West Center: Honolulu.
Google Scholar
Chhatre, A., & Agrawal, A. (2009). Trade-offs and synergies between carbon storage and livelihood benefits from forest commons. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America,
106(42), 17667–17670.
CAS
Article
Google Scholar
Chidumayo, E. N. (1987). Woodland structure, destruction and conservation in the Copperbelt area of Zambia. Biological Conservation,
40(2), 89–100.
Article
Google Scholar
Chundama, M. (2009). Preparing for REDD in dryland forests: Investigating the options and potential synergy for REDD payments in the miombo eco-region (Zambia country study). London: International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED).
Google Scholar
Colchester, M., Boscolo, M., Contreras-Hermosilla, A., Gatto, F. D., Dempsey, J., Lescuyer, G., et al. (2006). Justice in the forest: Rural livelihoods and forest law enforcement. Centre for International Forestry Research (CIFOR): Bogor.
Google Scholar
Cowie, A., Schneider, U. A., & Montanarella, L. (2007). Potential synergies between existing multilateral environmental agreements in the implementation of land use, land-use change and forestry activities. Environmental Science & Policy,
10(4), 335–352.
Article
Google Scholar
Creswell, J. W. (1998). Qualitative inquiry and research design: Choosing among five traditions. Thousand Oaks: SAGE Publications.
Google Scholar
De Bruijn, H., & ten Heuvelhof, E. (2000). Networks and decision making. Utrecht: Lemma Publishers.
Google Scholar
FAO. (2010). Global forest resource assessment. Rome: FAO.
Google Scholar
Forbes, D. (2000). Reading texts and writing geography. In I. Hay (Ed.), Qualitative research methods in human geography. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Google Scholar
Ghimire, B. K., & Pimbert, P. M. (1997). An overview of issues and concepts. In B. K. Ghimire, & P. M. Pimbert (Eds.), Social change and conservation (p. 342). London: Earthscan.
Gomar, J. O. V., Stringer, L. C., & Paavola, J. (2013). Regime complexes and national policy coherence: Experiences in the biodiversity cluster. Sustainability research institute working paper, number 48.
Graham, K. (2011). Making REDD+ cross-sectoral: Why, how, and what are the potential socio-economic impacts? http://www.odi.org.uk/resources/docs/7287.pdf. Accessed 8 Oct 2012.
Graham, K., & Vignola, R. (2011). REDD+ and Agriculture: A cross-sectoral approach to REDD+ and implications for the poor. http://redd-net.org/files/REDD%20and%20agriculture%20laid%20up.pdf. Accessed 9 Oct 2012.
GRZ. (1999). National biodiversity strategy and action plan. Lusaka: Ministry of Tourism, Environment and Natural Resources.
Google Scholar
GRZ. (2002). Zambia national action programme (NAP) for combating desertification and mitigating serious effects of drought. Lusaka: Ministry of Tourism, Environment and Natural Resources.
Google Scholar
GRZ. (2004). National agricultural policy. Lusaka: Ministry of Agriculture and Co-operatives.
Google Scholar
GRZ. (2006a). United nations convention on biological diversity: Third national report. Lusaka: Ministry of Tourism, Environment and Natural Resources.
Google Scholar
GRZ. (2006b). Vision 2030: A prosperous middle-income nation by 2030. Lusaka: Ministry of Finance and National Planning.
Google Scholar
GRZ. (2007a). National adaptation programme of action (NAPA) on climate change. Lusaka: Ministry of Tourism, Environment and Natural Resources.
Google Scholar
GRZ. (2007b). National energy policy. Lusaka: Ministry of Energy and Water Development.
Google Scholar
Hewitt, S. (2009). Discourse analysis and public policy research. Discussion paper series number 24: Centre for Rural Economy.
Holden, S. T. (1993). Peasant household modeling: Farming systems evolution and sustainability in northern Zambia. Agricultural Economics,
9(3), 241–267.
Article
Google Scholar
Jordan, A. (1999). The implementation of EU environmental policy: A policy problem without a political solution? Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy,
17(1), 69–90.
Article
Google Scholar
Kaimowitz, D. (2003). Forest law enforcement and rural livelihoods. International Forestry Review,
5(3), 199–210.
Article
Google Scholar
Kalaba, F. K., Quinn, C. H., Dougill, A. J., & Vinya, R. (2013). Floristic composition, species diversity and carbon storage in charcoal and agriculture fallows and management implications in Miombo woodlands of Zambia. Forest Ecology and Management,
304, 99–109.
Article
Google Scholar
Keleman, A., Manage, U. G., & Dooley, K. (2010). Conservation and the agricultural frontier: Collapsing conceptual boundaries. Journal of Sustainable Forestry,
29(6), 539–559.
Article
Google Scholar
Ledoux, L., Crooks, S., Jordan, A., & Kerry Turner, R. (2000). Implementing EU biodiversity policy: UK experiences. Land Use Policy,
17(4), 257–268.
Article
Google Scholar
Lenschow, A. (2002). Environmental policy integration: Greening sectoral policies in Europe. London: Earthscan.
Liu, J. G., Dietz, T., Carpenter, S. R., Alberti, M., Folke, C., Moran, E., et al. (2007). Complexity of coupled human and natural systems. Science,
317(5844), 1513–1516.
CAS
Article
Google Scholar
MA. (2005). Ecosystems and human well-being: Synthesis. Washington, DC: World Resource Institute.
Mwape, C., & Gumbo, D. (2010). Communities Reorganization for REDD+ implementation in Zambia. In X. Zhu, L. R. Møller, T. D. Lopez, & M. Z. Romero (Eds.), Pathways for Implementing REDD+. Experiences from carbon markets and communities (pp. 127–140). Roskilde, Denmark: UNEP.
Google Scholar
Myers, N. (1993). Tropical forests: The main deforestation fronts. Environmental Conservation,
20(01), 9–16.
CAS
Article
Google Scholar
Nasi, R., Wunder, S., & Campos, J. J. (2002). Forestry ecosystem services: Can they pay our way out of deforestation?. Global Environment Facility (GEF), United Nations Forum on Forestry (UNFF) II: Discussion paper prepared for the forestry roundtable. New York.
Google Scholar
Niang-Diop, I., & Bosch, H. (2005). Formulating an adaptation strategy. In B. Lim, E. Spanger-Siegfried, I. Burton, E. Malone, & S. Huq (Eds.), Adaptation policy frameworks for climate change: Developing strategies, policies and measures (pp. 183–204). Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.
Google Scholar
Oberthür, S., & Gehring, T. (Eds.). (2006a). Institutional interaction in global environmental governance. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Google Scholar
Oberthür, S., & Gehring, T. (2006b). Institutional interaction in global environmental governance: The case of the Cartagena protocol and the world trade organization. Global Environmental Politics,
6(2), 1–31.
Article
Google Scholar
Pichon, F. J. (1997). Colonist land-allocation decisions, land use, and deforestation in the Ecuadorian Amazon frontier. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 45(4), 707–744.
Google Scholar
Pittock, J. (2011). National climate change policies and sustainable water management, conflicts and synergies. Ecology and Society,
16(2), 1–25.
Google Scholar
Quinion, A., Chirwa, P. W., Akinnifesi, F. K., & Ajayi, O. C. (2010). Do agroforestry technologies improve the livelihoods of the resource poor farmers? Evidence from Kasungu and Machinga districts of Malawi. Agroforestry Systems,
80(3), 457–465.
Article
Google Scholar
Rasul, G., Chettri, N., & Sharma, E. (2011). Framework for valuing ecosystem services in the Himalayas. Kathmandu: ICIMOD.
Google Scholar
Reardon, T., & Vosti, A. S. (1995). Links between rural poverty and the environment in developing countries : Asset categories and investment poverty. World Development,
23(9), 1495–1506.
Article
Google Scholar
Rock, M. T. (1996). The stork, the plow, rural social structure and tropical deforestation in poor countries? Ecological Economics,
18(2), 113–131.
CAS
Article
Google Scholar
Rogers, D. L., & Whetten, D. A. (1982). Interorganizational coordination. Ames: Iowa State University Press.
Google Scholar
Rosendal, G. K. (2001). Impacts of overlapping international regimes: The case of biodiversity. Global Governance,
7, 95.
Google Scholar
Rudel, T., & Roper, J. (1997). The paths to rain forest destruction: Crossnational patterns of tropical deforestation, 1975–1990. World Development,
25(1), 53–65.
Article
Google Scholar
Sand, P. H. (1992). The effectiveness of international environmental agreements: A survey of existing legal instruments. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Google Scholar
Sharp, L., & Richardson, T. (2001). Reflections on Foucauldian discourse analysis in planning and environmental policy research. Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning,
3(3), 193–209.
Article
Google Scholar
SNDP. (2011). Sixth national development plan. Lusaka: Ministry of Finance and National Planning.
Google Scholar
Söderberg, C. (2008). ‘Much ado about nothing?’—Energy forest cultivation in Sweden: How intersectoral policy coordination affects outcomes from EPI in multisectoral issues. Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning,
10(4), 381–403.
Article
Google Scholar
Stokke, O. (2001). Governing high-seas fisheries: The interplay of global and regional regimes. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Book
Google Scholar
Stokke, O. S. (2009). The interplay of international regimes: Putting effectiveness theory to work. Lysaker: Fridtof Nansen Institute.
Strauss, A., & Corbin, J. (1990). Basics of qualitative research: Grounded theory procedures and techniques. Newbury Park: Sage.
Google Scholar
Stringer, L. C., Dyer, J. C., Reed, M. S., Dougill, A. J., Twyman, C., & Mkwambisi, D. (2009). Adaptations to climate change, drought and desertification: Local insights to enhance policy in southern Africa. Environmental Science & Policy,
12(7), 748–765.
Article
Google Scholar
Syampungani, S. (2009). Vegetation change analysis and ecological recovery of the Copperbelt Miombo woodland of Zambia. Stellenbosch: University of Stellenbosch.
Google Scholar
Syampungani, S., Chirwa, P. W., Akinnifesi, F. K., Sileshi, G., & Ajayi, O. C. (2009). The miombo woodlands at the cross roads: Potential threats, sustainable livelihoods, policy gaps and challenges. Natural Resources Forum,
33(2), 150–159.
Article
Google Scholar
Taylor, S. J., & Bogdan, R. (1984). Introduction to qualitative research methods: The search for meanings. New York: Wiley.
Google Scholar
Urwin, K., & Jordan, A. (2008). Does public policy support or undermine climate change adaptation? Exploring policy interplay across different scales of governance. Global Environmental Change,
18(1), 180–191.
Article
Google Scholar
Vinya, R., Syampungani, S., Kasumu, E., Monde, C., & Kasubika, R. (2011). Preliminary study on the drivers of deforestation and potential for REDD+ in Zambia. Lusaka: Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources.
Google Scholar
Virtanen, P. (2002). The role of customary institutions in the conservation of biodiversity: Sacred forests in Mozambique. Environmental Values,
11(2), 227–241.
Article
Google Scholar
Willows, R. I., & Connell, R. K. (Eds.). (2003). Climate adaptation: Risk, uncertainty and decision-making. Oxford: UKCIP.
Google Scholar
Young, O. R. (2002). The institutional dimensions of environmental change: Fit, interplay and scale. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Google Scholar
Young, O. R., King, L. A., Aggarval, A., Underdal, A., Sand, P. H., & Wasson, M. (1999). Institutional dimensions of global environmental change. In Science plan (p. 100). Bonn: International Human Dimension Program.
Zambia Department of Forestry, & FAO. (2008). Integrated land use assessment. Lusaka, Zambia: Ministry of Tourism Environment and Natural Resources.
Google Scholar