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| Programmes: The Buabeng - Fiema Monkey Sanctuary, Ghana
Tree Pods - a New Way of Feeding Goats, India
The Need for Agricultural Land in the City, Ghana
Stepping Off the Pesticides Treadmill, India
Vegetable Gardens in the City, Zimbabwe
Farmers Who Don't Just Farm, Poland
Introducing Ethical Trade, UK and Ghana
Different Ways of Understanding Ethical Trade, UK and Ghana
Fighting the Rat Problem Using New Traps, Mozambique
Alternatives to `Slash and Burn' Agriculture, Bolivia
Trading Cocoa Fairly, Ecuador
Training 'Barefoot Vets' to Treat Village Animals,
Indonesia
Sustainable Livelihoods:
Capital Assets
Vulnerability, Complexity and Diversification
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| Acknowledgements |
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The `In the Field' team would like to thank all those around the world who have
contributed to the programmes in this series of `In the Field'.
Most importantly, warm thanks are due to all those who agreed to be interviewed for the
programmes in the series. Most are listed under the individual programme notes, but thanks
go also to others who were interviewed but who are not named in the programmes.
We would also like to thank those who contributed in their professional capacity to the
series:
The Buabeng-Fiema monkey sanctuary, Ghana:
Paul Sarfo-Mensah, University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana and NRI
Tree Pods - A new way of feeding goats, India:
Dr NS Sharma, Bharatiya Agro-Industries Foundation (BAIF), Pune, India
Mr Vadher, BAIF
Mr Shyam Singh, BAIF
Czech Conroy, NRI
The need for agricultural land in the city, Ghana:
Ernestina Freduah Antoh, University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana
Dr. Judith Pender, NRI
Martin Adam, NRI
Adrienne Martin, NRI
Stepping off the pesticides treadmill, India:
Dr C.D. Mayee, director of the Central Institute of Cotton Research, Nagpur, India
Dr. Keshav Kranthi, Central Institute of Cotton Research, Nagpur, India
Dr. Derek Russell, NRI
Vegetable gardens in the city, Zimbabwe:
Adrienne Martin, NRI
Nicolienne Oudwater, NRI
Farmers who don't just farm, Poland:
Dr. Roza Godula, University of Krakow, Poland
Henryk Pawelec, Kielce
Dr. Monica Janowski, NRI
Introducing Ethical Trade and
Different Ways of Viewing Ethical Trade, Ghana and UK:
Stephanie Gallat, NRI (based in Ghana)
Man-Kwun Chan, NRI
Mick Blowfield, NRI
Fighting the rat problem using new traps, Mozambique:
World Vision, Mozambique
Adrian Meyer, Rodent Consultant, The Acheta Partnership, UK
Dr. Steve Belmain, NRI
Alternatives to `slash and burn' agriculture, Bolivia:
Benjamin Carreño, CIAT (Centro de Investigación Agrícola Tropical) Santa Cruz
Emilio Chileno, CIAT
Adalberto Flores, CIAT
Dr. Morag Webb, consultant to NRI
Barry Pound, NRI
Trading cocoa fairly, Ecuador:
Jose Antonio Santos. Maquita Chuchchic Comercializando como Hermanos (MCCH)
Jorge Hidalgo, CARE
All staff of MCCH who assisted in making the programme
Valerie Nelson, NRI
Chris Collinson, NRI
Mick Blowfield, NRI
Training `barefoot vets' to treat village animals, Indonesia:
Cokro Leksmono, Deliveri Project, Indonesia
Dil Peeling, DFID
We would like to thank all of those, at the BBC and in-country, who did translations of
original language interviews for use in voice-overs in the programmes.
We would also like to thank all of the studio managers at the BBC who assisted in the
technical side of the making of the programmes, to the graphics design department at NRI
who produced the flyer for the series, and to the web support staff at NRI, led by Alan
Bourne, who have provided advice and assistance in the design of the web version of these
notes.
Our thanks are due to staff of the Rural Livelihoods Department, DFID for their financial
support and also for their supportive advice and assistance during the making of the
programmes and the compiling of these notes; thanks go particularly to Dylan Winder.
Thanks are also due to programme managers of the DFID Renewable Natural Resources Research
Programmes, which funded most of the projects drawn upon and which provided some funding
for the making of the programmes.
In The Field is a collaboration
between the BBC
World Service and the Natural Resources
Institute of the University of Greenwich, supported by the Rural
Livelihoods Department of the UK Government Department for International
Development (DFID)
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