Kniha Development Planning and Project Cycle Analysis for Sericulture in Central Java Djeimy Kusnaman

Development Planning and Project Cycle Analysis for Sericulture in Central Java

Case Study: Banyumas Sutera Alam (BSA), Kaliori-Banyumas, Central Java

Jazyk: Angličtina
Vazba: Brožovaná
Dostupnost: Skladem u dodavatele
Odesíláme za 8-11 dnů
1 339
Sericulture, the production and processing of natural silk from silkworms feeding on mulberry leaves...

Informace o knize

Jazyk
Angličtina
Vazba
Kniha - Brožovaná
Vydáno
2008
Stránek
200
EAN
9783836487832
ISBN
3836487837
Enbook ID
06990061
Hmotnost
272
Rozměry
152 x 229 x 11

Kompletní popis

Sericulture, the production and processing of natural silk from silkworms feeding on mulberry leaves has its origin in China, but has spread to many other countries. Neither land nor labour in sericulture are in direct competition with the cultivation of staple crops. Sericulture is therefore seen as a potential source of additional income for small farmers in the tropics. The production technology, however, is sensitive and the demands on the organisational and institutional environment are considerable.§This study focuses on Indonesia , a developing country 1,919,440 sqkm, in area consisting of an archipelago of more than 17,000 islands (6,000 inhabited) with a population estimated in 2003 to be 235 million.§Java, as the central island, has a population of 100 million on area of 132,186 sq km. This corresponds with a population density of approximately 1000 persons per sq km, among the highest of any region in the developing world. Eighty percent of the Javanese population live in the rural areas and more than ninety percent are engaged in agriculture. Sericulture, the production and processing of natural silk from silkworms feeding on mulberry leaves has its origin in China, but has spread to many other countries. Neither land nor labour in sericulture are in direct competition with the cultivation of staple crops. Sericulture is therefore seen as a potential source of additional income for small farmers in the tropics. The production technology, however, is sensitive and the demands on the organisational and institutional environment are considerable. This study focuses on Indonesia, a developing country 1,919,440 sqkm, in area consisting of an archipelago of more than 17,000 islands (6,000 inhabited) with a population estimated in 2003 to be 235 million. Java, as the central island, has a population of 100 million on area of 132,186 sq km. This corresponds with a population density of approximately 1000 persons per sq km, among the highest of any region in the developing world. Eighty percent of the Javanese population live in the rural areas and more than ninety percent are engaged in agriculture.

Mohlo by vás zajímat

193

Among Monsters

Jamie McGuire
184

Towards Liturgies that Reconcile

Scott (William Scott) Haldeman
4 690

Phantom Limb

Dennis Palumbo
381

Frances's Reading Log

Martha Day Zschock
347

Song of the Shaman

Robert J Franks
343
5 439

Little Adsorption Book

Diran Basmadjian
6 320

Zákaznicí kteří koupili tuto knihu koupili také

155

Original Sin

Holy Evans
341
281

Spící spravedlnost

Stacey Abramsová
608
219
484

Jane Austenová

Robert Miles
202

Ichthyologie Und Limnologie

Ikenweiwe Bolatito Ikenweiwe
827

Le canari d'Hitler

Sandi Toksvig
259
1 278

Die christliche Mystik

Johann Joseph Görres
887