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Landholding fragmentation: Are folk soil taxonomy and equity important? A case study from Mexico
Mauricio R. Bellon
Research output
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Contribution to journal
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Article
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peer-review
4
Scopus citations
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Dive into the research topics of 'Landholding fragmentation: Are folk soil taxonomy and equity important? A case study from Mexico'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Arts & Humanities
Landholding
74%
Equity
63%
Fragmentation
56%
Taxonomy
55%
Soil
54%
Folk
52%
Farmers
52%
Soil Type
50%
Mexico
49%
Chiapas
16%
Social Control
12%
Tropics
11%
Government
5%
Earth & Environmental Sciences
landholding
86%
equity
63%
soil type
52%
fragmentation
50%
land type
25%
soil
24%
land
21%
farming system
20%
tropics
17%
socioeconomics
15%
distribution
6%
Social Sciences
fragmentation
54%
taxonomy
54%
farmer
50%
equity
45%
Mexico
45%
tropics
16%
small farmer
15%
social stratum
12%
social control
11%
present
6%
evidence
4%
Group
3%
Agriculture & Biology
soil taxonomy
100%
case studies
48%
Mexico
46%
farmers
40%
soil types
28%
soil
9%
socioeconomics
9%
tropics
8%