Authors
Ermias Aynekulu, Welday Wubneh, Emiru Birhane, Nigussu Begashaw1
Publication date
2006/6
Journal
The Electronic Journal of information systems in developing countries
Volume
25
Issue
1
Pages
1-10
Description
Agricultural land degradation in Ethiopia leads to an annual loss of roughly 2 million cubic meters of top soil. The relationship between this loss of soil quality and declining agricultural productivity is increasingly threatening rural livelihoods, putting pressure on urban centres as people migrate, as well as on very scarce forest resources on which the agricultural systems eventually depend Attempts to address land degradation have required the government of Ethiopia to fully understand the underlying social and ecological drivers of land degradation. In order to fully develop the knowledge portfolio required to design and implement land rehabilitation measures in remote areas experiencing degradation, an adaptable, robust and credible system of ethno‐ecological knowledge representation, analyses and communication is required. This is needed not only to bridge the technological gap between the rural and …
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