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2. Basis of Selection of the Cases Studied
2.1 Farmers' Participation in Farm Forestry
3. Commercialisation of Agriculture in Gujarat
3.1 Pattern of Land Use for Cash Crops
1.1 The Extent of Farm Forestry in the District
1.2 The Case of a Large Farmer in Sihor Talkuka of Bhavnagar
1.2.2 Role of the Forest Department
1.2.3 The pattern of intensive cropping on the farm
1.2.4 Costs and benefits from farm forestry
1.2.7 Outlook on future prospects of the farm
1.3 Involvement of Small Farmers in Farm Forestry
1.3.1 Introduction of farm forestry among the villagers
1.3.2 Farmers' perception of why they planted trees
1.3.3 Cost-benefit analysis, provided by farm families
1.3.4 Women's participation In farm forestry
1.3.5 Main problems faced by small farmers in farm forestry
1.3.6 Problems in marketing of polewood also faced by other farmers
1.3.7 Need for an organized market
1.3.8 Fuelwood from farm forestry for domestic use
2. Use of wasteland for farm forestry
2.1.1 Involvement of the Behavioural Science Centre with the Vankar community
2.1.2 Formation of a cooperative for acquiring land
2.1.4 How farm forestry developed on cooperative land
2.1.5 Organization of employment on the farm
2.1.6 Marketing: results of the 1985 harvest and prospects for the 1986 harvest
2.1.7 Forest Department and its role
2.1.8 Other problems faced by the cooperative in the adoption of farm forestry
2.1.9 Farm forestry as only one of the many development projects
2.1.10 The supply of fuelwood and fodder through farm forestry
2.1.11 Implications of farm forestry to the village social structure
2.1.12 How Vankar women are affected by farm forestry
2.1.13 Motivation behind the Vankar participation in farm forestry
2.1.14 Total exclusion of other villagers from the project
2.1.15 What forest tree growers would like to have done
2.2 Farm forestry by Tribals as a Part of Agroforestry on Wasteland and Degraded Forest Land
2.2.2 How the scheme is conceptualised
2.2.3 Role of the Forest Department and reactions of tribals
2.2.4 How the tribal rehabilitation scheme operates
2.2.5 Farm forestry component of the scheme
2.2.6 Other components of the scheme
2.2.7 Supply of Fuelwood and Fodder for Domestic Use
2.2.8 The traditional dependence of tribals on forests
2.2.9 Farm forestry perceived as savings in the bank
2.2.10 Multi-dimensional nature of the scheme
2.2.11 Marketing and alternative courses of action for the produce from farm forestry
1. Farm forestry on agricultural land
1.1.1 The forest Department's interest in farm forestry
1.1.2 Impact on the local labour market
1.1.3 Polewood market organization
1.2 Designing Farm Forestry Projects to Meet a Multiplicity of Needs
2. Farm forestry on wasteland, including degraded forests
2.1 Equity in the Vadgam Experience
2.1.1 Benefits in the Vankar village case
2.1.2 Problems in the Vankar case
2.1.3 Constraints on tree growing by rural poor
2.1.4 Developing local support systems
2.2 Lessons from Tribal Experiences with Farm Forestry
2.2.1 Impact of agroforestry on malnutrition
2.2.2 Long-term impact on socioeconomic development of tribals