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  1. A discourse on Forestry science.Laurent Umans - 1993 - Agriculture and Human Values 10 (4):26-40.
    Forestry science is firmly based on the ideas of rationalization, emancipation, and progress as embedded in the Modernity Project. Its emergence in the late Seventeenth century is primarily a rationalization of timber production, although to some extend attention is given to other functions of the forest. As an applied science, forestry was preoccupied with bio-technical and economic research. The development in forestry science during the last four decades is described as a broadening of this narrow rationalization concept. Social and ecological (...)
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  • Toward a knowledge of local knowledge and its importance for agricultural RD&E.Constance M. McCorkle - 1989 - Agriculture and Human Values 6 (3):4-12.
    Local knowledge (both technological and sociological) and communication systems represent a logical starting point and a rich body of resources for successful agricultural research, development, and extension (RD&E). Drawing upon concrete examples from Asia, Africa, and Latin America, this essay presents an overview of definitions, topics, and applications of local knowledge in agricultural RD&E. Also noted are caveats, future research and training needs, and human values issues related to the study and utilization of local knowledge systems and their products.
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  • Uses, values, and use values of the Sundarbans.Jnanabrata Bhattacharyya - 1990 - Agriculture and Human Values 7 (2):34-39.
    The decimation of the Sundarbans has resulted from attempts to satisfy short-term demands by exhausting the chances of satisfying future demands. The forest cannot be preserved by a policy that under-valorizes the urgency of the short-term needs or by a policy that is imposed from above, but it may be by social forestry. Social forestry augments the supply of forest products from non-forest lands, and, most significantly, includes the users in developing appropriate forest policies.
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  • Canada's volunteer NGOs' social forestry projects in the Third World: A preliminary evaluation. [REVIEW]Prem Kumar & K. K. Sharma - 1990 - Agriculture and Human Values 7 (3-4):56-61.
    This paper outlines some flaws of the faddist social forestry movement that is currently sweeping Canada's volunteer NGOs. Typically, these include: Canadian NGOs' ignorance of tropical ecology; their inability to adequately communicate with the Third World clientel because of the socio-cultural barriers; a propensity to undertake numerous development projects and thus seek to bloat their organizations so as to claim federal government grants; and most of all, complaints of alleged racism against NGOs by Canada's ethnic minorities who are kept out (...)
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