em PRESS Publishing
  • HOME
  • IN PRINT
  • ABOUT em PRESS
  • OUT OF PRINT
  • REVIEWS
    • The People of Budj Bim
    • The People of Gariwerd
    • Recreating the Country
    • Gariwerd - Reflecting on the Grampians
    • Daylesford Nature Diary
    • Daughter of Two Worlds
    • Central Highlands Walk & Ride Circuits
    • Goldfields Track Walk or Ride Guide
    • My Father's Son & Tomorrow
    • Sustainably Managing Private Native Forests – a guide for Victorian landowners
    • A Fortunate Accident
    • William Barak - Bridge builder of the Kulin
    • Adding Value to the Farmers' Trees
    • Bureaucracy Blues & Alpha Jerk
    • Perpetual Calendar
  • ESSAYS
    • Cultural burning
    • Raising A Green Wood Shed
    • Reimagining and reinventing our culture
    • Aboriginal standing stones
    • The slaughter of trees
  • em PRESS BLOG
  • CONTACT US
  • OTHER TITLES
  • BOOKSHOPS
  • SHOP ONLINE
  • HOME
  • IN PRINT
  • ABOUT em PRESS
  • OUT OF PRINT
  • REVIEWS
    • The People of Budj Bim
    • The People of Gariwerd
    • Recreating the Country
    • Gariwerd - Reflecting on the Grampians
    • Daylesford Nature Diary
    • Daughter of Two Worlds
    • Central Highlands Walk & Ride Circuits
    • Goldfields Track Walk or Ride Guide
    • My Father's Son & Tomorrow
    • Sustainably Managing Private Native Forests – a guide for Victorian landowners
    • A Fortunate Accident
    • William Barak - Bridge builder of the Kulin
    • Adding Value to the Farmers' Trees
    • Bureaucracy Blues & Alpha Jerk
    • Perpetual Calendar
  • ESSAYS
    • Cultural burning
    • Raising A Green Wood Shed
    • Reimagining and reinventing our culture
    • Aboriginal standing stones
    • The slaughter of trees
  • em PRESS BLOG
  • CONTACT US
  • OTHER TITLES
  • BOOKSHOPS
  • SHOP ONLINE
Search by typing & pressing enter

YOUR CART

BLOG

22/10/2024 0 Comments

Bold book scoping agroforestry around the Pacific Rim launched in Fiji

Picture
The University of the South Pacific (USP) and the Australian Centre for International Agriculture Research (ACIAR) jointly launched Raising Trees & Livelihoods in Fiji last September. Co-edited by Professor Digby Race, the Dean of the Graduate School at USP, and Gib Wettenhall from em PRESS, the book aims to bridge the gap between traditional forestry and agriculture practices by showcasing the benefits of integrating trees into farming systems. It draws on South Pacific, Asia, Africa, and Latin America case studies.

The book offers a comprehensive insight into the community-scale and national-scale potential of agroforestry, within the tropical regions of the world. Supported by ACIAR, the book draws on a decade’s worth of findings from more than 15 ACIAR-supported projects in tropical countries around the world. It provides a holistic analysis of how agroforestry can address challenges faced by smallholders who, according to statistics, manage less than two hectares of land, yet produce about one-third of the world’s food in the face of climate change, land degradation, and market volatility.

This is the second book Gib has co-edited with Digby.  The first reviewed the results of joint Australian and Indonesian agroforestry research with smallholders in Indonesia – visit Adding Value to the Farmers' Trees in Reviews.
​
For more information and to order a copy,  visit the University of the South Pacific Book Centre or contact Professor Digby Race on [email protected]

0 Comments

    Author

    Writer and em PRESS publisher Gib Wettenhall lives among Mollongghip's volcanic hills at the far eastern end of the Divide between Ballarat and Daylesford.

    Archives

    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    March 2024
    November 2023
    June 2023
    June 2022
    March 2022
    July 2021
    January 2019
    September 2018
    June 2018
    April 2018
    December 2017
    June 2017

    Categories

    All Budj Bim Em PRESS Authors Farm Forestry Recreating The Country

    RSS Feed

HOME
ABOUT US
SHOP ONLINE

em PRESS Publishing specialises in Australian landscapes and their historical and cultural contexts. em PRESS is particularly interested in fusing Indigenous, European settler and nature-based readings of the landscape to provide a truer view of our country.