60 research outputs found
Prospects of Feed Crops in Southeast Asia: Alternatives to Alleviate Poverty Through Secondary Crops' Development; Proceedings of the Regional Workshop Held in Bogor, Indonesia, September 14-15, 2004
Opening Address, by Yap Kioe Sheng; Prospects of Feed Crops in Southeast Asia: Alternatives to Alleviate Poverty through Secondary Crops' Development, by Erna M. Lokollo and Budiman Hutabarat; The Status and Prospects of Feed Crops in Indonesia, by Dewa K.S. Swastika, Made O.A. Manikmas, Bambang Sayaka, and Ketut Kariyasa; Comments on Country Report of Indonesia: "Prospect of Feed Crops in South East Asia: Alternatives to Alleviate Poverty through Secondary Crops' Development", by Kusuma Diwyanto; Prospects of Feed Crops in Malaysia, by Tunku Mahmud bin Tunku Yahya and Sarmin bin Sukir; Comments on Prospects of Feed Crops in Malaysia, by Ibrahim bin Che Embong; Status and Prospects of Feed Crop Production in the Philippines, by Danilo C. Cardenas and Lara Marie M. de Villa; Comments on the Philippine Country Report, by Danilo P. Baldos; Prospects of Feed Crops in Southeast Asian Countries: Thailand (FEED SEA), by Chamras Rojanasaroj, Siriporn Wonlertprayoon, Pachara Krittaphol, Wareeporn Phojeen, Panee Pattamawipak and Sopapan Ninragsa; Comments on the Country Report of Thailand, by Chan Chiumkanokchai; Feed Crops in South Asian Countries: Problems and Prospects (an outline), by S.S.E. Ranawana;
Upsurging Livestock Feed Demand in Southeast Asia: A Consolidated Discussion, by Budiman Hutabarat; Closing Remarks, by Yap Kioe Shen
Prospects of Feed Crops in Southeast Asia: Alternatives to Alleviate Poverty Through Secondary Crops' Development; Proceedings of the Regional Workshop Held in Bogor, Indonesia, September 14-15, 2004
Opening Address, by Yap Kioe Sheng; Prospects of Feed Crops in Southeast Asia: Alternatives to Alleviate Poverty through Secondary Crops' Development, by Erna M. Lokollo and Budiman Hutabarat; The Status and Prospects of Feed Crops in Indonesia, by Dewa K.S. Swastika, Made O.A. Manikmas, Bambang Sayaka, and Ketut Kariyasa; Comments on Country Report of Indonesia: "Prospect of Feed Crops in South East Asia: Alternatives to Alleviate Poverty through Secondary Crops' Development", by Kusuma Diwyanto; Prospects of Feed Crops in Malaysia, by Tunku Mahmud bin Tunku Yahya and Sarmin bin Sukir; Comments on Prospects of Feed Crops in Malaysia, by Ibrahim bin Che Embong; Status and Prospects of Feed Crop Production in the Philippines, by Danilo C. Cardenas and Lara Marie M. de Villa; Comments on the Philippine Country Report, by Danilo P. Baldos; Prospects of Feed Crops in Southeast Asian Countries: Thailand (FEED SEA), by Chamras Rojanasaroj, Siriporn Wonlertprayoon, Pachara Krittaphol, Wareeporn Phojeen, Panee Pattamawipak and Sopapan Ninragsa; Comments on the Country Report of Thailand, by Chan Chiumkanokchai; Feed Crops in South Asian Countries: Problems and Prospects (an outline), by S.S.E. Ranawana; Upsurging Livestock Feed Demand in Southeast Asia: A Consolidated Discussion, by Budiman Hutabarat; Closing Remarks, by Yap Kioe ShengFeed Crops, Poverty, Food Security and Poverty,
Food Consumption, Food Cash Dependency, and Food Policy in Indonesia
Perhaps the most surprising discovery was that the vast majority of rural consumers were also very dependent on cash for acquiring food. Most agricultural economists concerned with less developed countries have long assumed that rural households produced most of the food they consumed. This study found that among the 1183 rural households surveyed in Eastern Java, the lowest average percentage purchased of the fourteen categories of food were 70%, 72%, and 76% for fats and oils, vegetables and fruits, respectively. Eighty-eight percent of cereals were purchased and for the remaining ten categories 90 to 100 percent of the foods were purchased in the market. The assumption that people in rural areas in Indonesia produce and consume their own foods may no longer hold. The data from the survey shows that fewer and fewer subsistence farms exist in this area (East Java). The rice price policy which was in existence at the time of the survey may explain the very high proportion of cereals which were purchased. However, further study is needed to determine whether such high proportions of food are purchased by rural households in other parts of Indonesia and in other less developed countries. (Abstract shortened by UMI.).Made available in DSpace on 2015-09-25T20:55:57Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2
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Previous issue date: 1999Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 84319
Lift date: Forever
Reason: Restricted to the U of I community idenfinitely during batch ingest of legacy ETDsRestricted to the U of I community idenfinitely during batch ingest of legacy ETDsU of I Only138 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1999
Food Consumption, Food Cash Dependency, and Food Policy in Indonesia
138 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1999.Perhaps the most surprising discovery was that the vast majority of rural consumers were also very dependent on cash for acquiring food. Most agricultural economists concerned with less developed countries have long assumed that rural households produced most of the food they consumed. This study found that among the 1183 rural households surveyed in Eastern Java, the lowest average percentage purchased of the fourteen categories of food were 70%, 72%, and 76% for fats and oils, vegetables and fruits, respectively. Eighty-eight percent of cereals were purchased and for the remaining ten categories 90 to 100 percent of the foods were purchased in the market. The assumption that people in rural areas in Indonesia produce and consume their own foods may no longer hold. The data from the survey shows that fewer and fewer subsistence farms exist in this area (East Java). The rice price policy which was in existence at the time of the survey may explain the very high proportion of cereals which were purchased. However, further study is needed to determine whether such high proportions of food are purchased by rural households in other parts of Indonesia and in other less developed countries. (Abstract shortened by UMI.).U of I OnlyRestricted to the U of I community idenfinitely during batch ingest of legacy ETD
Bunga Rampai, Rantai Pasok Komoditas Pertanian Indonesia
Dalam konteks keberlanjutan pembangunan pertanian, Perubahan lingkungan strategis seperti liberalisasi perdagangan, pesatnya pertumbuhan pasar modern, dinamika permintaan pasar, dan Perubahan preferensi konsumen menuntut adanya perbaikan dalam sistem manajemen rantai pasok (Supply Chain Management/SCM). Dengan penerapan SCM secara konsisten dan berkesinambungan diharapkan terjadi peningkatan produktivitas, efisiensi usaha, efektivitas distribusi sehingga dapat memenuhi sekaligus memuaskan kebutuhan konsumen. Dengan demikian, pemahaman yang utuh tentang SCM mutlak diperlukan oleh seluruh stakeholder pertanian.
Buku ini mengulas tentang SCM yang dimulai dari tataran teoritis dan selanjutnya membahasnya dengan mengetengahkan kasus pada beberapa komoditas baik di subsektor tanaman pangan, hortikultura, peternakan, maupun perkebunan. Secara singkat dapat dikemukakan bahwa SCM akan memberikan manfaat jika telah memenuhi persyaratan: (1) aktivitas yang dilakukan sepanjang rantai pasok harus menghasilkan nilai tambah, (2) ada peranan jasa di setiap simpul, (3) harus ada “penentu” harga, (4) ada hubungan kesepadanan antara pelaku, dan (5) harus teridentifikasi penentu dan pengambil keputusan ( key decision makers)
14th annual John Perkins Lecture
Dr. John Perkins returns to campus Tuesday, April 30, 11 a.m., at First Free Methodist Church, for the 14th annual John Perkins Lecture Series. This year’s morning event features Erna Kim Hackett, executive pastor at The Way Berkeley. Later that day, Hackett and Dr. Perkins will continue the morning’s topic, “Words Have Power,” at 7:30 p.m., also in First Free Methodist Church.
John Perkins is one of the leading evangelical voices to come out of the American civil rights movement and an internationally known author, speaker, and teacher. His is the co-founder of SPU’s John Perkins Center for Reconciliation, Leadership Training, and Community Development and the author of the new book One Blood: Parting Words to the Church on Race and Love. Erna Kim Hackett served with InterVarsity for 18 years in Black Ministries and Urban Programs. She is a preacher, pastor, writer, activist, and singer
Faktor-Faktor yang Mempengaruhi Keputusan Ekonomi Rumah Tangga Petani di Kelurahan Setugede Kota Bogor
Contextualizing narrative theory: reading the politics of formal innovation in contemporary women's fiction
To ignore the strategies and structures through which stories are told, this thesis contends, is to neglect a vital dimension of their politics. Narratology provides productive analytical tools to illuminate the complex and varied mechanics of narrative form, yet it also bears the traces of its structuralist origins. Its value is therefore contingent upon its continuing reformulation as an expansive, pluralist and contextualized critical discipline. Participating in this expansion, this
thesis evidences the pertinence and vitality of some narratological models and the limitations of others. It opens up alternative critical possibilities by drawing upon insights within contemporary critical theory, from poststructuralist philosophy to transcultural feminism to
sociolinguistics. Above all, my interventions proceed from close readings of innovative fiction by women writers hitherto all but unrepresented in, and therefore potentially subversive of, existing models: Nicole Brossard, Daphne Marlatt, Hiromi Goto, Ali Smith, Jackie Kay, Erna Brodber, Dionne Brand, Aritha van Herk.
The first chapter formulates an in-between critical space where feminist and postmodernist theories of narrative intersect. It re-examines metafiction through the lens of auto(bio)graphical practice and feminist poststructuralist theories of self, and introduces the notions of folds and
echoes to describe specific structural innovations. Chapter Two examines unconventional uses of second-person address and reconsiders existing narratological approaches in their light, focusing on the `push and pull of narrative' that the `you' form enacts. Chapter Three addresses the insufficient attention paid to multiply narrated novels, theorizing them as `narrative communities' and introducing terms to describe different internal relations between narrators, relations that can often be read as determinedly 'democratic'. The final chapter contests the
hegemony of temporal models of narrativity by formulating a 'spatial poetics' that accounts both for how spatial structures can be agents of narrative change and for the complexity of textual constructions of space, which frequently exceed static definitions of 'setting'.
Running throughout is a reconception of narrative as located not with the figure of the narrator, but in relations of intersubjectivity. The narratological criticism formulated here works towards a situated ethics of reading responsive to the politics of writing: it is engaged, relational, and ever in process
Exploring the relationship between eDNA and eRNA to advance biomonitoring techniques in rivers
Rivers, Ports, Waterways and Dredging Engineerin
Status and prospects of feed crops in southeast Asia: an integrated report
This working paper has been compiled using information gathered by individual country studies complemented with other relevant information to provide a regional perspective on current issues and prospects. The studies also highlight the potential of co-operation in trade among members of ASEAN/AFTA through bilateral agreements. Some common strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats related to the development of feed crops have been identified. However, each country has its own uniqueness in pursuing efforts to capitalize on the challenges faced in the development of feed crops
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