Poverty alleviation as a pathway to sustainable forest management C. K. SreedharanJagannadha Rao Matta OriginalPaper 16 January 2010 Pages: 877 - 888
High and low value fish chains in the Mekong Delta: challenges for livelihoods and governance Vo Thi Thanh LocSimon R. BushNguyen Tri Khiem OriginalPaper Open access 29 January 2010 Pages: 889 - 908
Lessons for sustainability from the world’s most sustainable culture Nick Wills-Johnson OriginalPaper 02 February 2010 Pages: 909 - 925
Community engagement in the sustainable management of rivers: Barekese catchment, Kumasi, Ghana Tyhra Carolyn KumasiKwasi Obiri-DansoJames H. Ephraim OriginalPaper 02 February 2010 Pages: 927 - 943
Toward an integrated marine protected areas policy: connecting the global to the local Marivic G. PajaroMonica E. MulrennanAmanda C. J. Vincent OriginalPaper 14 February 2010 Pages: 945 - 965
Agricultural land use efficiency and food crop production in Ghana Amos K. QuayeCharles A. S. HallValerie A. Luzadis OriginalPaper 10 February 2010 Pages: 967 - 983
Population dynamics, rural livelihoods and environmental degradation: some experiences from Tanzania R. Y. M. KangalaweJ. G. Lyimo OriginalPaper 14 February 2010 Pages: 985 - 997
Managing the village-level open-access water resources in a region facing rapidly declining water availability Mousumi Roy OriginalPaper 10 February 2010 Pages: 999 - 1012
An evaluation of fishery co-management experience in an Amazonian black-water river (Unini River, Amazon, Brazil) Thaissa SobreiroCarlos Edwar de Carvalho FreitasAprígio Mota Moraes OriginalPaper 19 February 2010 Pages: 1013 - 1024
The clean development mechanism and community forests in Sub-Saharan Africa: reconsidering Kyoto’s “moral position” on biocarbon sinks in the carbon market Mark Purdon OriginalPaper 18 March 2010 Pages: 1025 - 1050
A guidance framework for mainstreaming resource efficiency and sustainable consumption and production in a developing country context Brett Cohen OriginalPaper 19 May 2010 Pages: 1051 - 1068
A detailed look at the three disciplines, environmental ethics, law and education to determine which plays the most critical role in environmental enhancement and protection Uchechukwu Ugwuh Solomon OriginalPaper 25 March 2010 Pages: 1069 - 1080