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1ST WORLD
CONGRESS |
27 June TO 02 July 2004
ORLANDO, FLORIDA, USA
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OF
AGROFORESTRY
Working Together
for Sustainable Land-use Systems |
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Congress web site updated:
26 June 2008
BACKGROUND
Agroforestry began to
attain prominence in the late 1970s, when the international scientific
community realized its potentials in the tropics and recognized it as a
practice in search of science. During the 1990s, the relevance of
agroforestry for solving problems related to deterioration of family
farms, increased soil erosion, surface and ground water pollution, and
decreased biodiversity was recognized in the industrialized nations too.
Thus, agroforestry is now receiving increasing attention as a sustainable
land-management option the world over because of its ecological, economic,
and social attributes.
Agroforestry research and development are, however, at a crossroads. The
potential of the practices has been amply illustrated, but the investment
in a science base has not reached a level that can meet the demand for
technology delivery. It is time, therefore, to evaluate progress, assess
available options, and design strategies for the future.
CONGRESS OBJECTIVES
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To provide a global forum
for agroforestry professionals to share knowledge, experiences, and
ideas.
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To plan future strategies
in agroforestry research, education and training, and development.
EXPECTED OUTPUTS
Planned publications include a
state-of-the-art compendium of about 30 chapters, a book of abstracts of
all presentations, and a Congress Declaration. Selected
presentations will be published as peer-reviewed journal articles after
the congress. The Congress Declaration that will capture the
discussions and deliberations during the congress will be developed for
use as a policy document for further promotion of agroforestry.
|
New
Vistas in Agroforestry
The Congress
Compendium will be available for purchase at the
congress for a once only special price of $20 per copy. For a
preview of the chapters and authors,
click
here. |
Return to Index
WHO
SHOULD ATTEND
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Academicians
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Development Professionals
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Environmental Consultants
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Extension Specialists
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Farmers/Land Owners
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Government Officials
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Land Managers/Consultants
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Natural Resource and Forestry Professionals
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Non-Government and Private-Voluntary Organizations
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Policy Makers
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Private Sector Representatives
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Scientists
- Students
Return to Index
PROGRAM
The official language of
the Congress shall be English. Congress deliberations and
communications will be handled in English only. All monetary figures
mentioned are in US dollars.
The overall congress theme “Working Together for
Sustainable Land-use Systems”, will be developed throughout the
congress in plenary, sub-plenary, concurrent, and poster sessions. World
leaders in research and development of natural resources
will speak on different aspects of this theme during the inaugural,
plenary, and sub-plenary functions.
Plenary
Sessions
- The congress deliberations will focus on five major topics.
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Improvement of Rural Livelihoods
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Enhancement of the Environment and Landscape
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Agroforestry Science and Education
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Policy,
Social, and Institutional Issues
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Agroforestry: The Next 25 Years
Sub-plenary
Symposia -
There will be eight symposia, two simultaneously each day,
on the following topics.
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Agroforestry and Food Security
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Biodiversity
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Carbon Sequestration
and Environmental Benefits
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Ecological Basis of North
American Agroforestry
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Public/Private
Partnerships
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Technology Transfer
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Trees and Markets
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Water Issues
Oral
(Concurrent) and Poster Sessions -
Invited and voluntary
contributions will be presented in more than 20 oral sessions, up to six
of them concurrently, and two poster sessions, under the following themes.
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Agroforestry (AF)
Adoption
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AF
and Food Security
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AF Education
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AF for Health and
Nutrition (AIDS/HIV)
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AF in Semiarid Regions
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Biodiversity
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Biophysical Interactions
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Carbon Sequestration and
Environmental Benefits
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Climate Change
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Eco-agriculture
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Economic Analysis
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Gender and AF Adoption
in Africa
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Land and Tree Tenure and
Management of AF
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Land Owners’ Session
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Local AF Knowledge in Global Context
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Managing Genetic
Diversity
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Mechanization in AF
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Medicinal and Aromatic
Plants
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Scaling up of AF
Benefits
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Short-rotation Woody
Crops, Phytoremediation
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Small Farm Soil
Fertility Management Strategies
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Tree Domestication
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Trees in Fragmented Landscapes
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Tropical Homegardens
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Valuation of
Environmental Benefits
Return to Index
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
All individuals who wish to present their work
in any aspect of agroforestry are invited and encouraged to submit an
abstract for consideration as an oral or poster presentation at the
congress. Oral presentations of accepted submissions will be scheduled for
one of the concurrent sessions. Suggested themes for different sessions
are listed under the section “oral (concurrent) and poster sessions.”
Authors may indicate their session preference in which they wish to
present their work. All abstracts, both oral and poster, will be published
in the book of abstracts to be distributed at the congress and posted on
the web site following the congress. Special issues of relevant
international scientific journals will feature selected presentations from
the congress. Following the congress, authors of such presentations will
be invited to develop and submit full manuscripts for consideration as
peer-reviewed journal papers.
The abstract deadline has been extended until
15 October 2003. Abstracts are to be submitted electronically. Hard
copies of abstracts may be considered only under exceptional circumstances
such as the authors having no access to electronic-submission facilities.
Detailed instructions on how to submit an abstract are provided below.
Please follow the instructions carefully to ensure that your submission is
received and recorded.
All foreign nationals who
wish to attend the congress and need a visa for entry into the USA are
strongly encouraged to start their visa application process as soon as
possible as the application process could take up to six months. Travel
reservations should also be made sufficiently in advance as more than 40
million people visit Orlando’s world-renowned attractions annually.
|
Deadline for Abstract Submittal
has passed. |
Return to Index
CONGRESS FIELD TRIPS
Wednesday, 30 June
2004
Hosted by: The School of Forest
Resources and Conservation (SFRC), IFAS/University of Florida
Congress
participants have the opportunity to select one of the three half-day
field trips described below to visit agroforestry practices in the region,
at no additional cost, on Wednesday, 30 June 2004. The congress
registration form provides a place for indicating your field trip
preference. These field trips are available for registered congress
participants only (not for accompanying persons).
Note: The field trips are within 50
miles (80 km) from Orlando. All field trips will involve walking through
forests/tree stands; field attire is recommended; approximate duration:
1:30 to 6:30 pm.
Agroforestry in an Urbanizing Landscape
Land management practices that are being used
to increase income from agricultural and natural-resource activities in
central Florida include: growing high value floral and herbal crops under
trees; integrating livestock, timber production, hunting and ecotourism;
alley cropping with vegetables; and more intensive management of riparian
zones. Tour stops will look at these options to maintain rural landscapes
north and east of Orlando, and will include discussions on the role of
non-timber forest products, silvopasture, and streamside management zones
in the southeastern U.S.
Non-Timber Forest Products and Public Land
Management
The field trip will visit a forest farming
(lucrative fern production) area northeast of Orlando and travel back
through the Ocala National Forest to see how collection permits for
'crooked wood' and other special forest products (NTFPs) fit in timber and
public land management plans.
Short Rotation Woody Crops (SRWC)
(Co-hosted by The Common Purpose Institute)
Fuelwood could be used advantageously for
co-firing in the electric utilities that are concentrated in central Florida
region and reclaimed phosphate mined lands in the region constitute a
significant land base on which SRWCs may be cultivated as fuelwood. This
field trip will visit a 50-hectare SRWC plantation approximately one hour
southwest of Orlando. Cottonwood (Populus deltoides), eucalypts (Eucalyptus
amplifolia and E. grandis), and other species were established,
beginning in 2000, on a clay settling area formerly dominated by
cogongrass (Imperata cylindrica). Additional information pertinent
to this field trip is available at:
http://www.treepower.org
Return to Index
EXHIBITS
The
congress will feature an excellent opportunity for organizations to
display educational and informative materials to a broad range of
international participants.
Exhibit/display space is limited and will be assigned on a first-come,
first-served basis.
Each display must be accompanied by a fully paid registration.
Display Space Fee is $350 and includes a 10' deep x 10' wide display area,
a skirted 6’ table, two chairs, pipe and drape, a wastebasket, and an
identification sign showing company name.
To register
for a Display Space,
click here to reserve
exhibit space; a credit card will be needed.
(via our Secured Server)
OR,
click
here to print a display-space reservation form, then return
the form by fax or mail with payment to the Office of Conferences and Institutes.
(You will need Adobe Acrobat
Reader to open and print the PDF form file.)
Return to Index
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
Thanks to the support of various organizations, agencies and companies, a
limited amount of financial aid may be available to selected
individuals to help them attend the congress. Preference will be given to
young scientists and researchers from developing countries. Assistance may
include partial or full coverage of the following congress-related
expenses: accommodation (shared), airfare, congress registration, or
meals. Our funding situation is, however, still uncertain. We strongly
recommend that individuals seeking travel support may also approach local
and regional offices of foreign assistance agencies including: USAID
(USA), GTZ (Germany), DfID (UK), JICA (Japan), SIDA (Sweden), NORAD
(Norway), IDRC and CIDA (Canada), DANIDA (Denmark), Rockefeller
Foundation, and Ford Foundation. Regional/Local offices of international
agencies such as FAO, UNDP, other UN Agencies, and the World Bank (and
Regional Development Banks such as Asian Development Bank, African
Development Bank, and Inter-American Development Bank) also are
recommended. Although submission of an abstract (for a congress
presentation) is not a requirement for funding assistance, applicants
should state how their participation will benefit them and contribute to
the success of the congress.
Financial assistance applications will be accepted until 30 September
2003 and are to be submitted electronically. Hard copies of the
application may be considered only under exceptional circumstances such as
having no access to electronic-submission facilities. Detailed
instructions for the financial assistance application are provided below.
Please follow the instructions carefully to ensure that your submission is
received and recorded.
Once again, all foreign nationals who wish to attend the congress and need
a visa for entry into the USA are encouraged to start their visa
application process as soon as possible.
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Deadline for requesting Financial
Assistance has passed. |
Return to Index
TENTATIVE AGENDA
PRE-CONGRESS WORKSHOPS
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Sunday, 27 June 04 |
PRE-CONGRESS WORKSHOPS
- If you registered for the pre-congress workshops you may
CLICK HERE for detailed workshop agendas.
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GENERAL CONGRESS
PROGRAM STRUCTURE
(Pre-congress activities are not listed on the schedule)
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Sunday, 27 June 04 |
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9:00am-7:00pm |
Registration Open
(open for duration of the congress) |
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SATELLITE EVENTS |
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12:00pm-3:30pm |
Agroforestry
Technology Transfer and Extension Working Group (refer
to description) |
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4:00pm-6:00pm |
Inauguration
[Session Chair: Richard Jones]
[Speaker Introduction: E. T. York]
Norman Borlaug:
Agriculture and the Environment -- Bridging the Divide through
Agroforestry |
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6:00pm-8:00pm |
Welcome Reception |
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Monday, 28 June 04 |
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8:30am-9:30am |
Plenary Session
[Session Chair: Dennis P. Garrity]
M. S. Swaminathan: Enhancement of Environment and Landscape |
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9:30am-10:00am |
Break |
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10:00am-12:00pm
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Concurrent
Symposia
Symposium I - Biodiversity
Symposium II - Ecological Basis of North American Agroforestry |
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12:00pm-1:30pm
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Poster and Exhibit
Display Room Open
- Boxed lunch provided |
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1:30pm-3:00pm
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Concurrent
Sessions
Session A1 - Tree
Domestication I
Session A2 - AF Education
Session A3 - Eco-agriculture
Session A4 - Economic Analysis
Session A5 - Trees in Fragmented Landscapes
Session A6 - Biophysical Interactions |
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3:00pm-3:30pm
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Break |
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3:30pm-5:00pm
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Concurrent
Sessions
Session B1 - Tree
Domestication II
Session B2 - AF, Carbon Sequestration, and Landscape Ecology in Western Europe
Session B3 - Poverty Alleviation and Sustainablility
Session B4 - Scaling up of AF Benefits
Session B5 - Tropical Homegardens |
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5:00pm-5:30pm
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Break |
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5:30pm-7:30pm
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Formal Poster
Session I & Exhibit Displays
- [Click
Here for Poster
Presenter's Information] |
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SATELLITE EVENTS |
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5:30pm-7:30pm |
Association for Temperate Agroforestry (AFTA)
(refer
to description) |
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5:30pm-7:30pm |
Conservation International Book Release
(refer
to description) |
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6:00pm-7:30pm |
U.S. 1890 University Agroforestry
Consortium Meeting |
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Tuesday, 29 June 04 |
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8:30am-9:30am |
Plenary Session
[Session Chair: Gregory Ruark]
J. Moseley: Policy, Social, Institutional Issues of
Agroforestry |
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9:30am-10:00am |
Break |
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10:00am-12:00pm
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Concurrent
Symposia
Symposium I - Trees and Markets
Symposium II - Carbon Sequestration |
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12:00pm-1:30pm
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Poster and Exhibit
Display Room Open
- Lunch on your own |
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1:30pm-3:00pm
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Concurrent
Sessions
Session C1 - Short-rotation Woody Crops, Phytoremediation
Session C2 - Carbon Sequestration and Environmental Benefits
Session C3 - Biodiversity
Session C4 - Mechanization in AF
Session C5 - Land Tenure and Gender Issues |
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3:00pm-3:30pm
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Break |
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3:30pm-5:00pm
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Concurrent
Sessions
Session D1 - Environmental
Amelioration
Session D2 - AF in Semiarid Regions
Session D3 - Managing Genetic Diversity
Session D4 - Land Owners' Session
Session D5 - Policy & Institutions |
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5:00pm-5:30pm
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Break |
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5:30pm-7:30pm
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Formal Poster
Session II & Exhibit Displays
- [Click
Here for Poster
Presenter's Information] |
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SATELLITE EVENTS |
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5:30pm-7:00pm |
Ecoagriculture Partners: Increasing
Productivity, Wild Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services in Agricultural
Landscapes (refer
to description) |
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5:30pm-7:30pm |
Discussion on Teaching Agroforestry
(refer
to description) |
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5:30pm-7:30pm |
Landcare- An Approach to Sustainable Land
Use (refer
to description) |
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6:00pm-7:00pm |
Tree database CD [Contact: Tony
Simmons] |
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Wednesday, 30 June
04 |
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8:30am-9:30am |
Plenary Session
[Session Chair:
Bjorn Lundgren]
Hosney El-Lakany: Improvement of Rural Livelihoods |
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9:30am-10:00am |
Break |
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10:00am-12:00pm
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Concurrent
Symposia
Symposium I - Water Issues
Symposium II - Food Security |
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12:00pm-1:30pm
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Lunch on your own |
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1:30pm-6:00pm
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FIELD TRIPS
1. Agroforestry in an Urbanizing Landscape
2. Non-Timber Forest Products and Public Land
Management
3. Short-Rotation Woody Crops |
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Thursday, 01 July
04 |
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8:30am-9:30am |
Plenary Session
[Session Chair:
Gene Garrett]
P. K. Nair: Science and Education |
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9:30am-10:00am |
Break |
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10:00am-12:00pm
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Concurrent
Symposia
Symposium I - Technology Transfer
Symposium II - Public/Private Partnership in AF Research & Development |
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12:00pm-1:30pm
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Lunch on your own |
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1:30pm-3:00pm
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Concurrent
Sessions
Session E1 - AF Adoption I
(Tropical)
Session E2 - AF and Food Security
Session E3 - Climate Change
Session E4 - Local AF Knowledge in Global Context
Session E5 - Tree and Component Management |
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3:00pm-3:30pm
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Break |
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3:30pm-5:00pm
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Concurrent
Sessions
Session F1 - AF Adoption II (Temperate)
Session F2 - AF for Health and Nutrition (AIDS/HIV)
Session F3 - Small Farm Soil Fertility Management Strategies
Session F4 - Medicinal and Aromatic Plants
Session F5 - Decision Support Tools |
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5:15pm-10:30pm
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