Search and Download

Export 43 results:
Author [ Title(Asc)] Type Year
Filters: First Letter Of Title is G  [Clear All Filters]
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 
G
Global_Witness _.  2015.  Guns, Cronies, and Crops: How Military, Political and Business Cronies Conspired to Grab Land in Myanmar. :1-54.
Lu J.  2021.  Grounding Chinese investment: encounters between Chinese capital and local land politics in Laos. Globalizations. 18(3):422-440.
Franco JC, Borras_Jr. SM.  2019.  Grey areas in green grabbing: subtle and indirect interconnections between climate change politics and land grabs and their implications for research. Land Use Policy. 84:192-199.
Woods KM.  2019.  Green Territoriality: Conservation as State Territorialization in a Resource Frontier. Human Ecology. 47:217-232.
Milne S, Frewer T, Mahanty S.  2023.  Green territoriality and resource extraction in Cambodia. Routledge Handbook of Global Land and Resource Grabbing. :159-172.
Fairhead J, Leach M, Scoones I.  2012.  Green Grabbing: a new appropriation of nature? The Journal of Peasant Studies. 39(2):237-261.
Polanyi K.  1944.  The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time. :317.
Lu J, Schönweger O.  2019.  Great expectations: Chinese investment in Laos and the myth of empty land. Territory, Politics, Governance. 7(1):61-78.
Ta'ang_Student_and_Youth_Organization(TSYO).  2011.  Grabbing Land: Destructive Development in Ta'ang Region. :1-70.
Sturgeon JC.  2010.  Governing minorities and development in Xishuangbanna, China: Akha and Dai rubber farmers as entrepreneurs. Geoforum. 41(2):318-328.
Trong_Hoan_Do _, Tan_Phuong_Vu _, Catacutan D, Van_Truong_Nguyen _.  2020.  Governing Landscapes for Ecosystem Services: A Participatory Land-Use Scenario Development in the Northwest Montane Region of Vietnam. Environmental Management. :1-18.
Kenney-Lazar M, Schönweger O, Messerli P, Nanhthavong V.  2023.  Governing Land Concessions in Laos. Routledge Handbook of Global Land and Resource Grabbing. :96-109.
Kenney-Lazar M.  2018.  Governing Dispossession: Relational Land Grabbing in Laos. Annals of the American Association of Geographers. 108(3):679-694.
Kenney-Lazar M.  2017.  Governing Communal Land in the Lao PDR. :i-iii,1-19.
Bonnin C, Turner S.  2013.  ‘A good wife stays home’: gendered negotiations over state agricultural programmes, upland Vietnam. Gender, Place & Culture. 21(December 2014):1302-1320.
Shwe_Gas_Movement(SGM).  2013.  Good Governance and the Extractive Industry in Burma: Complications of Burma’s Regulatory Framework. :1-18.
Baird IG.  2024.  Going organic: Challenges for government-supported organic rice promotion and certification nationalism in Thailand. World Development. 173:106421.
Vongpraseuth T, Gyu C.  2015.  Globalization, foreign direct investment, and urban growth management: Policies and conflicts in Vientiane, Laos. Land Use Policy. 42:790-799.
Hirsch P.  2001.  Globalisation, Regionalisation and Local Voices: The Asian Development Bank and Rescaled Politics of Environment in the Mekong Region. Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography. 22(3):237-251.
Zoomers A.  2010.  Globalisation and the foreignisation of space: seven processes driving the current global land grab. The Journal of Peasant Studies. 37(2):429-447.
Baird IG.  2014.  The Global Land Grab Meta-Narrative, Asian Money Laundering and Elite Capture: Reconsidering the Cambodian Context. Geopolitics. 19(2):431-453.
Sikor T, Auld G, Bebbington AJ, Benjaminsen TA, Gentry BS, Hunsberger C, Izac A-M, Margulis ME, Plieninger T, Schroeder H et al..  2013.  Global land governance: From territory to flow? Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability. 5(5):522-527.
Somphongbouthakanh P.  2022.  A Glimpse into Women's Customary Forest Tenure Practices in Lao PDR: Access, Use and Management Rights of Women in Customary Tenure Systems in Mai District, Phongsali Province. MRLG Case (May):30pp..
Kane S., Gritten D., Sapkota L.M, Bui LThi, Dhiaulhaq A..  2016.  Getting the positives out of forest landscape conflicts. Unasylva. 67(247-248):45-51.
Biddulph R.  2011.  Is the Geographies of Evasion hypothesis useful for explaining and predicting the fate of external interventions? The case of REDD in Cambodia Globalization and Development: Rethinking interventions and governance. :1-19.

Pages