Rural-urban migration in China: policy options for economic growth, environmental sustainability ... more Rural-urban migration in China: policy options for economic growth, environmental sustainability and equity
www.ifpri.org IFPRI Division Discussion Papers contain preliminary material and research results.... more www.ifpri.org IFPRI Division Discussion Papers contain preliminary material and research results. They have not been subject to formal external reviews managed by IFPRI’s Publications Review Committee, but have been reviewed by at least one internal or external researcher. They are circulated in order to stimulate discussion and critical comment.
Although branded as ‘obstructionists’ and major agents of ‘disease and filth’ by city authorities... more Although branded as ‘obstructionists’ and major agents of ‘disease and filth’ by city authorities, food vendors remain the pivotal node in the local food system in most informal settlements; therefore, their interaction with the environment and infrastructure services, and challenges they face to keep the food safe to eat, requires further grounded exploration. Food vendors from informal settlements in Nairobi, Kenya, who are acting as mappers and change agents, are building multi-layered views of places through the deliberative process of knowledge coproduction by participatory sensing, which lead to opportunities and challenges to improve those places.
Rural-urban migration in China: policy options for economic growth, environmental sustainability ... more Rural-urban migration in China: policy options for economic growth, environmental sustainability and equity
www.ifpri.org IFPRI Division Discussion Papers contain preliminary material and research results.... more www.ifpri.org IFPRI Division Discussion Papers contain preliminary material and research results. They have not been subject to formal external reviews managed by IFPRI’s Publications Review Committee, but have been reviewed by at least one internal or external researcher. They are circulated in order to stimulate discussion and critical comment.
Although branded as ‘obstructionists’ and major agents of ‘disease and filth’ by city authorities... more Although branded as ‘obstructionists’ and major agents of ‘disease and filth’ by city authorities, food vendors remain the pivotal node in the local food system in most informal settlements; therefore, their interaction with the environment and infrastructure services, and challenges they face to keep the food safe to eat, requires further grounded exploration. Food vendors from informal settlements in Nairobi, Kenya, who are acting as mappers and change agents, are building multi-layered views of places through the deliberative process of knowledge coproduction by participatory sensing, which lead to opportunities and challenges to improve those places.
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Papers by Cecilia Tacoli