Academic literature on the topic 'Ethiopian highlands'

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Journal articles on the topic "Ethiopian highlands"

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Saleem, M. A. Mohamed. "Fragile East African Highlands: a Development Vision for Smallholder Farmers in the Ethiopian Highlands." Outlook on Agriculture 24, no. 2 (June 1995): 111–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/003072709502400208.

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For societies that depend on agriculture, the process of meeting current or future welfare demands should not continue without regard to the potential long-term dangers of land resource over-use. With an increasing human and animal population in the Ethiopian highlands development efforts so far have been hasty and disjointed, and have sidetracked issues of production base security and conservation. As a result, large-scale degradation has ensued, and if the trend continues the agricultural future of the country is threatened. Cohesive land-use practices are needed in order to manage the fragile Ethiopian highland resource environment properly and to support growing human demands.
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Asrat, Asfawossen, Metasebia Demissie, and Aberra Mogessie. "Geoheritage conservation in Ethiopia: the case of the Simien Mountains." Quaestiones Geographicae 31, no. 1 (March 1, 2012): 7–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10117-012-0001-0.

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Geoheritage conservation in Ethiopia: the case of the Simien Mountains Ethiopia constitutes one of the most significant environmental and cultural reserves on Earth. Ethiopia's natural and cultural tourist attractions are mostly associated with geological features: the active Ethiopian and Afar rifts as well as the Simien and Bale massifs are few examples. Ethiopia's cultural history, religious manifestations and civilization, like the rock-hewn churches of Lalibela and the stelae of Axum, are also imprinted in rock. Geomorphological and geological features, notably the isolation of the north-western highlands from the external world by the harsh Afar depression close to the sea, determined the route of Ethiopian history. Though tourism has been identified as a major sustainable development sector, systematic geoheritage evaluation and conservation strategies are lacking in the country. I this paper the Simien Mountains are presented as major geoheritages which should be prioritized for geoconservation in order to develop sustainable tourism (geotourism) in the area.
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Jury, Mark R. "Ethiopian Highlands Crop-Climate Prediction: 1979–2009." Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology 52, no. 5 (May 2013): 1116–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/jamc-d-12-0139.1.

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AbstractThis study compares different methods of predicting crop-related climate in the Ethiopian highlands for the period 1979–2009. A target index (ETH4) is developed as an average of four variables in the June–September season—rainfall, rainfall minus evaporation, estimated latent heat flux, and vegetation, following correlation with crop yields at Melkassa, Ethiopia (8.4°N, 39.3°E, 1550 m elevation). Predictors are drawn from gridded near-global fields of surface temperature, surface air pressure, and 200-hPa zonal wind in the preceding December–March season. Prediction algorithms are formulated by stepwise multivariate regression. The first set of predictors derive from objective principal component (PC) time scores with tropical loading patterns, and the second set is based on key areas determined from correlation with the target index. The second PC of upper zonal wind reveals a tropical–subtropical dipole that is correlated with ETH4 at two-season lead time (correlation coefficient r = −0.53). Point-to-field regression maps show high-latitude signals in surface temperature (positive in North America and negative in Eurasia) and air pressure (negative in the North Pacific Ocean and positive in the South Pacific). Upper zonal winds are most strongly related with ETH4 over the tropical Pacific and Africa at two-season lead time. The multivariate algorithm that is based on PC predictors has an adjusted r2 fit of 0.23, and the algorithm using key-area predictors achieves r2 = 0.37. In comparison, numerical model forecasts reach r2 = 0.33 for ECMWF simulations but are low for other models. The statistical results are specific to the ETH4 index, which is a climate proxy for crop yields in the Ethiopian highlands.
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Mekonnen, Ademe, and William B. Rossow. "The Interaction between Deep Convection and Easterly Wave Activity over Africa: Convective Transitions and Mechanisms." Monthly Weather Review 146, no. 6 (June 2018): 1945–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/mwr-d-17-0217.1.

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Recent work using observational data from the International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project (ISCCP) and reanalysis products suggests that African easterly waves (AEWs) form in association with a “transition” process from smaller and scattered convection into larger and organized mesoscale convective activity. However, the transition process is unclear and how mesoscale convection initiates AEWs is not well understood. Analysis based on 25 years of ISCCP and reanalysis datasets show that increasing intradiurnal activity, atmospheric instability, and specific humidity precede the development of well-organized convection over the Ethiopian highlands. Atmospheric instability favors a high frequency of scattered, isolated convection to the east of the Ethiopian highlands, first, followed by a continuing and large increase in instability and increasing humidity, which supports well-organized larger-scale convection. The timing of the changes of thermodynamic variables shows that the dominant transition process is scattered, with weakly organized convection transitioning into the well-organized mesoscale convection, and this initiates the AEWs. Slightly before the mesoscale convection peaks over the Ethiopian highlands, low-level moist westerlies, low- to midlevel wind shear, and positive relative vorticity increase over the region. Evidence shows that the large-scale and local environment enables the scattered and less well-organized convection to merge and form larger and well-organized convection. The dynamic processes suggest that the dominant pathway for AEW initiation is scattered convection transitioning to large and well-organized convection over the Ethiopian highlands and this initiates AEWs westward of the Ethiopian highlands.
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Feyisa, Taye Hailu, and Jens B. Aune. "Khat Expansion in the Ethiopian Highlands." Mountain Research and Development 23, no. 2 (May 2003): 185–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1659/0276-4741(2003)023[0185:keiteh]2.0.co;2.

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Viste, Ellen, and Asgeir Sorteberg. "Moisture transport into the Ethiopian highlands." International Journal of Climatology 33, no. 1 (November 23, 2011): 249–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/joc.3409.

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Wakjira, Mulugeta, and Abebe Getahun. "Ichthyofaunal diversity of the Omo-Turkana basin, East Africa, with specific reference to fish diversity within the limits of Ethiopian waters." Check List 13, no. 2 (March 4, 2017): 2059. http://dx.doi.org/10.15560/13.2.2059.

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The freshwaters of the East African nation of Ethiopia are divided into nine main drainage basins. One of these, the Omo-Turkana basin, spans a large part of southwestern Ethiopian highlands and northern Kenya, and consists of the Omo-Gibe (or simply, Omo) River and a northern portion of Lake Turkana. Despite some development activities, including proposed dam construction with potential impacts on ichthyofaunal diversity, the Ethiopian part of the basin generally lacks comprehensive study or full scientific documentation. During the current surveys 31 species were identified from the lower Omo River and Ethiopian part of Lake Turkana, with some new records for the basin. The Omo River system was found to be richer in species while Lake Turkana has a higher abundance. Ichthyofaunal diversity within Ethiopian waters is specifically addressed, and an annotated checklist for native species of the basin is provided.
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Holloway, Garth John. "Sustainable Land-Use Pathway Ranking and Selection." Sustainability 12, no. 19 (September 23, 2020): 7881. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12197881.

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The desire for refining status quo cost–benefit protocols to fully encompass econometric model uncertainty motivates the search for improved technology. Availability of unique Ethiopian highlands milk-market livestock data provides an ideal laboratory for investigation of alternative land-use pathway designs. In these contexts, we present novel methodology for ranking and selecting sustainable ‘land-use pathways,’ arguing that the methodology is central to sustainable-land-use-policy prescriptions, providing essential innovation to assessments hitherto devoid of probabilistic foundation. Demonstrating routine implementation of Markov-Chain, Monte-Carlo procedure, ranking-and-selection enactment is widely disseminable and potentially valuable to land-use policy prescription. Application to a sample of Ethiopian-highlands, land-dependent households highlights empirical gains compared to conventional methodology. Applications and extensions that profit future land-use sustainability within the Ethiopian highlands and, also, more generally, are discussed.
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Cheneka, Bedassa R., Susanne Brienen, Kristina Fröhlich, Shakeel Asharaf, and Barbara Früh. "Searching for an Added Value of Precipitation in Downscaled Seasonal Hindcasts over East Africa: COSMO-CLM Forced by MPI-ESM." Advances in Meteorology 2016 (2016): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/4348285.

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Downscaling of seasonal hindcasts over East Africa with the regional climate model (RCM) COSMO-CLM (CCLM), forced by the global climate model (GCM) and MPI-ESM, is evaluated. The simulations are done for five months (May to September) for a ten-year period (2000–2009), with the evaluation performed only for June to September. The dry years, 2002 and 2009, and the wet years, 2006 and 2007, are well captured by the models. By using ground based and satellite gridded observation data for evaluation it is found that both COSMO-CLM and MPI-ESM overestimate June to September precipitation over the Ethiopian highlands and in parts of the lowland with respect to all reference datasets. In addition we investigated the potential and real added value for both the RCM and the GCM hindcasts by upscaling (arithmetic mean) the precipitation resolution both in temporal and in spatial scales, over North Ethiopia (EN), South Ethiopia (ES), South Sudan (SS), and Sudan (S). Results inferred that using the RCM for seasonal forecast adds value in capturing extreme precipitation years, especially in the Ethiopian highlands. It is also found that the potential and relative potential added value decrease with decreasing the temporal resolution.
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Gottelli, Dada, and Claudio Sillero-Zubiri. "The Ethiopian wolf – an endangered endemic canid." Oryx 26, no. 4 (October 1992): 205–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0030605300023735.

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The Ethiopian wolf is a social canid endemic to the highlands of Ethiopia. Today perhaps only 500 individuals survive, making it the world's rarest and probably most endangered canid. Its range has already been reduced and it is threatened by further loss of habitat to high-altitude subsistence agriculture and overgrazing by livestock. Today it survives in only six locations, with the largest and probably only genetically viable population being found in the Bale Mountains National Park. The most immediate threats for the survival of Ethiopian wolves are disease, domestic dogs and human persecution. Improved management in Bale and Simien Mountains National Parks and the establishment of a captive-breeding programme are urgently needed to prevent the extinction of this species.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Ethiopian highlands"

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Ashkriz, Elnaz. "Regional Sources of Precipitation in the Ethiopian Highlands." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för geovetenskaper, 2015. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-252771.

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The purpose of this essay is to investigate the origin of the large amount of precipitation that is present in the northern Ethiopian Highlands. With Moisture transport into the Ethiopian Highlands by Ellen Viste and Asgeir Sorteberg as a base, this essays intents to compare the same data but by focusing on a much smaller time scale. This frame was chosen to see if the data would deviate (i.e. a small and specific time scale versus a large and general time scale). Whilst the investigation by Viste and Sorteberg focuses on the two most rain rich months, July and August during 1998-2008, this essay focuses on only July during 2008.                       To investigate where the precipitation originates from, this essay has analyzed different meteorological parameters such as horizontal and vertical winds at different altitudes and the moisture content of these winds.                       This essay has like Viste’s and Sorteberg’s paper used ERA-Interim data as a basis. However the course of action has differed. This essay has made conclusions by visually drawing conclusions by studying the data images while Viste and Asgeir have drawn their conclusions by backtracking the wind to its origin.                       This investigations results showed that great amounts of moisture were transported into the highlands from the south-west, and to some extent also from the north. While the moisture transport from the south-west was large due to the level of moist in the air, these winds where fairly small and at low altitudes. The winds from the north were visible at higher altitudes and were stronger, however they carried much less water vapor. However, exactly how much each of these winds actually contributed to producing rain is more difficult to say.                       The results from Viste and Asgeir (2011) showed that the amount of moist that was transported into the highlands were about 46 percent more from the north compared to from the south. The contribution to moisture release within the area was however almost equally great from north and south.                       Both investigations thus showed that the largest amount of moist was transported from the south and north. What this study did however not address was how large amount of the entire moist that had contributed to rain.                       One anomaly of large amounts of precipitation was registered on the 20th of July 2008. This study looked closer into this which showed that large winds were registered this date as well as an upwind cell. One can presume that these winds carried large amounts of moisture, which previous results has shown, and that this might be an explanation to the large amount of precipitation that was measured on the 20th of July.
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Shen, Tommy. "Beyond agriculture diversification of household income in the Ethiopian highlands /." CONNECT TO ELECTRONIC THESIS, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/1961/6984.

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Zeleke, Gete. "Landscape dynamics and soil erosion process modelling in the North-western Ethiopian Highlands /." [Bern] : [s.n.], 1999. http://www.ub.unibe.ch/content/bibliotheken_sammlungen/sondersammlungen/dissen_bestellformular/index_ger.html.

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Tibbo, Markos. "Productivity and health of indigenous sheep breeds and crossbreds in the central Ethiopian highlands /." Uppsala : Department of Animal Breeding and Genetics, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, 2006. http://epsilon.slu.se/200651.pdf.

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Handino, Mulugeta Lolamo. "'Green famine' in Ethiopia : understanding the causes of increasing vulnerability to food insecurity and policy responses in the Southern Ethiopian highlands." Thesis, University of Sussex, 2014. http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/48738/.

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This thesis examines the underlying causes of food insecurity, famine in general and green famine in particular in the enset-dominant livelihood zones of Kambata land in southern Ethiopia, which are historically considered more resilient and less vulnerable to food insecurity and famine than other parts of Ethiopia. Given Ethiopia's long-standing history of food insecurity and famines, the discourse of food insecurity and famine is dominated by natural and demographic factors as the main causes. In order to unpack the multi-layered underlying causes of food insecurity in general and green famine in particular, the thesis adopts Sen's analytical framework of ‘entitlement to food'. Using multi-site qualitative research techniques, this thesis captures the perceptions of different actors at different levels about the causes of green famine, identifies the sources of livelihood vulnerability and the types of livelihood strategies undertaken by households in the study area. By systematically capturing and analysing these different aspects, the study concludes that the causes of green famine extend beyond the dominant narratives of drought and population growth, and that these factors alone cannot fully explain famine occurrence. Green famine is caused by a web of complex and intertwined policy-related, political, natural, socio-­‐economic and demographic factors that have long been present in the study area. The thesis further investigates how the contemporary understanding and classification of famine is dominated by anthropometric and mortality outcomes (‘objective indicators') and thresholds set by outsiders and how ‘subjective indicators' such as the perceptions, knowledge, experience and coping strategies of famine victims are undervalued and given less weight by ‘famine scales'. By incorporating ‘subjective indicators' of famine, this thesis challenges conventional famine conceptualisation and measurement and recommends that these indicators be given equal treatment and weight to ‘objective indicators' in famine classification.
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Habermann, Birgit. "Ways of knowing of farmers and scientists : tree and soil management in the Ethiopian Highlands." Thesis, University of Sussex, 2014. http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/49648/.

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The Ethiopian Highlands have been studied extensively, hosting a large amount of research for development projects in agriculture and forestry over several decades. The encounters in these projects were also encounters of different ways of knowing that were negotiated by the actors meeting in the space provided by the projects. This research explores these encounters and the social worlds they are embedded in, drawing on actor-oriented approaches as well as theories of narratives and framing. Ways of knowing and citizen epistemologies are taken as a lens to understand the role of identities in knowledge production and use. The two case studies were agroforestry research projects in the Ethiopian Highlands. The research followed a range of qualitative and ethnographic research methods. Different types of farmers and scientists meet in the case studies. I recognise that they all have individual agency, nevertheless I use the terms ‘scientist' and ‘farmer' in this thesis. I use the terms to describe certain groups of actors who all draw on different ways of knowing, and different value systems, when interacting with each other and their environment. The results indicate that the importance of social worlds at different scales and the contexts of research projects tend to be underestimated. In spite of good intentions scientific methodologies, terminologies and narratives tend to dominate. Scientists in the case studies acknowledged the existence of farmers' ‘indigenous' knowledge, but they determined the value of knowledge by its scientific applicability and the replicability of experiments. Research systems force the scientists into a certain modus operandi with limited possibilities to experiment and to respond to the complexities and diversities of people's social worlds. Farmers in the case studies preferred observation from their parents, observing from others or the environment as a way of learning and gaining knowledge. Depending on their personalities and their life histories they also relied on alternative ways of knowing rooted in spirituality, emotions and memories. Powerful influences on ways of knowing resulted from the way languages and authority had been used. These often led to the exclusion of marginalised community members from access to knowledge and technologies. Unfortunately, common narratives prevailed in the case studies, and alternative ways of knowing were often marginalised. By acknowledging different ways of knowing and the importance of different social worlds and different ways of doing research, both scientists and farmers could benefit and develop more sustainable pathways for agricultural and forestry land use.
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Darmon, Chloé. "A morphosyntactic description of Xamtanga : an Agaw (Central Cushitic) language of the northern Ethiopian highlands." Thesis, Lyon 2, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015LYO20089.

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Cette thèse propose une description de la morphologie et de la syntaxe du xamtanga, une langue membre de la famille agaw, c’est à dire la branche centrale du couchitique (afro-asiatique). Le xamtanga est parlé par environ 200 000 locuteurs sur les hauts plateaux du nord de l’Ethiopie, dans la zone Wag Xɨmrä de la région Amhara. Cette étude est basée sur des données (textes et élicitations) issues des dialectes d’Abɨrgälle et de Saqʷät’ä collectées durant cinq séjours de terrain entre 2008 et 2013. Prenant appui sur les précédents travaux de David Appleyard (1987) et de Leo Reinisch (1884), elle a pour objectif d’offrir une description du xamtanga axée sur l’analyse de certains phénomènes intéressants d’un point de vue typologique et/ou aréal. Une attention particulière est par exemple accordée au système de marquage casuel en partie gouverné par la hiérarchie +/- animé/défini, à l’existence de causatifs multiples, à l’expression de l’applicatif via différents types de périphrases construites avec les opérateurs verbaux ‘donner’, ‘dire’ ou ‘laisser’, aux catégories relevant du Temps-Aspect-Mode qui mettent en jeu des formes identiques à des subordonnées de but, et aux diverses subordonnées relatives
This dissertation intends to provide a description of the morphology and syntax of Xamtanga, a language which belongs to the Agaw family, i.e. the Central branch of Cushitic (Afro-Asiatic). Xamtanga is spoken by approximately 200 000 speakers on the northern Ethiopian highlands, in the Wag Xɨmrä zone of the Amhara region. Based on data (texts and elicitations) from the Abɨrgälle and Saqʷät’ä dialects collected during five fieldtrips between 2008 and 2013 and building on the previous studies of David Appleyard (1987) and Leo Reinisch (1884), the thesis aims at offering a description of Xamtanga that focuses on the analysis of some particularly interesting features from a typological and/or areal perspective. Special attention is for instance given to the system of case marking partly driven by the animacy/definiteness hierarchy, the existence of multiple causatives, the expression of the applicative through different types of periphrastic constructions built with the verbal operators ‘give’, ‘say’ or ‘leave’, the Tense-Aspect-Mood categories which involve forms identical to purpose subordinate clauses, as well as the various uses of relative clauses
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Finneran, Niall Patrick. "Post-Pleistocene socio-economic developments in the northern Ethiopian/Eritrean Highlands : a case study from Aksum, Tigray." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1999. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/273076.

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Eshetu, Zewdu. "Forest soils of Ethiopian highlands : their characteristics in relation to site history : studies based on stable isotopes /." Umeå : Swedish Univ. of Agricultural Sciences (Sveriges lantbruksuniv.), 2000. http://epsilon.slu.se/avh/2000/91-576-5881-1.pdf.

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Bekele, Wagayehu. "Economics of soil and water conservation : theory and empirical application to subsistence farming in the Eastern Ethiopian highlands /." Uppsala : Dept. of Economics, Swedish Univ. of Agricultural Sciences, 2003. http://epsilon.slu.se/a411.pdf.

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Books on the topic "Ethiopian highlands"

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International Symposium on Vertisols Management (2000 Debre Zeyit, Shewa, Ethiopia). Advances in vertisols management in the Ethiopian highlands. [Addis Ababa]: Ethiopian Agricultural Research Organization, 2001.

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Benin, S. Policies for livestock development in the Ethiopian highlands. Nairobi: International Livestock Research Institute, 2002.

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Kamara, C. S. mr Intercropping maize & forage type cowpeas in the Ethiopian highlands. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: Soil Science & Plant Nutrition Section, International Livestock Centre for Africa, 1991.

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Tangka, F. K. Food security effects of intensified dairying: Evidence from the Ethiopian highlands. Nairobi: International Livestock Research Institute, 2002.

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Amede, Tilahun. Reversing the degradation of the arable land in the Ethiopian Highlands. London: IIED Drylands Programme, 2001.

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Astatke, Abiye. Building ponds with animal power in the Ethiopian highlands: A manual. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: International Livestock Centre for Africa, 1986.

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United Nations Research Institute for Social Development. Constraints to environmental rehabilitation through people's participation in the northern ethiopian highlands. Geneva: UNRISD, 1990.

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hl, Michael Sta. Constraints to environmental rehabilitation through people's participation in the Northern Ethiopian highlands. Geneva: UNRISD, 1990.

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Benin, S. Impacts of land redistribution on land management and productivity in the Ethiopian highlands. Nairobi: International Livestock Research Institute, 2002.

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Zeleke, Gete. Landscape dynamics and soil erosion process modelling in the North-western Ethiopian highlands. Berne, Switzerland: University of Berne, Institute of Geography, 2000.

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Book chapters on the topic "Ethiopian highlands"

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Nyssen, Jan, Jean Poesen, Sil Lanckriet, Miro Jacob, Jan Moeyersons, Mitiku Haile, Nigussie Haregeweyn, et al. "Land Degradation in the Ethiopian Highlands." In World Geomorphological Landscapes, 369–85. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-8026-1_21.

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Williams, Martin. "Ethiopian Highlands and Rift Valley (1971–1978)." In Nile Waters, Saharan Sands, 59–71. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-25445-6_8.

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Awange, Joseph. "Ethiopian Highlands: The Water Tower of Nile." In The Nile Waters, 99–131. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-64756-8_5.

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Engda, Tegenu A., Haimanote K. Bayabil, Elias S. Legesse, Essayas K. Ayana, Seifu A. Tilahun, Amy S. Collick, Zachary M. Easton, Alon Rimmer, Seleshi B. Awulachew, and Tammo S. Steenhuis. "Watershed Hydrology of the (Semi) Humid Ethiopian Highlands." In Nile River Basin, 145–62. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-0689-7_7.

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Nyssen, J., J. Moeyersons, J. Deckers, Mitiku Haile, and J. Poesen. "The Amba Landscape of the Ethiopian Highlands, Shaped by Rockfall." In World Geomorphological Landscapes, 179–89. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-8026-1_9.

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O’Grady Walshe, Clare. "The Ethiopian Highlands: The Exercise of Seed Sovereignty at the Local Level." In International Political Economy Series, 197–236. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-12870-8_6.

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Tadesse, Wubalem, Mulugeta Lemenih, and Shiferaw Alem. "Forest Management in the Sahel and Ethiopian Highlands and Impacts on Climate Change." In Managing Forest Ecosystems: The Challenge of Climate Change, 429–45. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-28250-3_21.

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Abiye, Ayele A., and Jens B. Aune. "Technical Options for Agricultural Development in the Ethiopian Highlands: A Model of Crop-Livestock Interactions." In Contributions to Economics, 49–57. Heidelberg: Physica-Verlag HD, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-57558-7_3.

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Birru, Girma Abebe, Hany El Kateb, and Reinhard Mosandl. "Rehabilitation of Degraded Natural Forests by Enrichment Planting of Four Native Species in Ethiopian Highlands." In Tropical Forestry, 377–85. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-19986-8_25.

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Selassie, Yihenew G., and Tilahun Amede. "Investing in Land and Water Management Practices in the Ethiopian Highlands: Short- or Long-Term Benefits?" In Challenges and Opportunities for Agricultural Intensification of the Humid Highland Systems of Sub-Saharan Africa, 105–14. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-07662-1_9.

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Conference papers on the topic "Ethiopian highlands"

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Birku, Bamlaku Desalegn. "CATCHMENT CHARACTERIZATION FOR RAINWATER HARVESTING SUITABILITY ANALYSIS: CASE STUDY IN THE HIGHLANDS OF ETHIOPIA." In GSA Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado, USA - 2016. Geological Society of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2016am-277140.

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Simane, Belay. "The Sustainability of Community-Based Adaptation in the Choke Mountain Watersheds, Blue Nile Highlands, Ethiopia." In The 3rd World Sustainability Forum. Basel, Switzerland: MDPI, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/wsf3-h001.

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Tesfaye Ayehu, Getachew. "Land capability mapping with SPOT data and geo-information technology south Gondar, North-Western highlands of Ethiopia." In 2013 Second International Conference on Agro-Geoinformatics. IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/argo-geoinformatics.2013.6621917.

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Reports on the topic "Ethiopian highlands"

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Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele, Teklu Erkossa, Vladimir Smakhtin, and Ashra Fernando. Improved water and land management in the Ethiopian highlands: its impact on downstream stakeholders dependent on the Blue Nile. Intermediate Results Dissemination Workshop held at the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI), Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 5-6 February 2009. International Water Management Institute (IWMI), 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.5337/2011.0014.

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