ACCESSIBILITY OF RURAL ROADS IN JAIPUR DISTRICT

2021 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 121-131
Author(s):  
RICHA SINGH ◽  
◽  
SARINA KALIA ◽  
K.K. MISHRA ◽  
◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dominique Lord ◽  
Hamidou Mamadou Abdou ◽  
Antoine N'Zue ◽  
Georges Dionne

2021 ◽  
Vol 20 ◽  
pp. 100996
Author(s):  
María Pilar Sánchez-González ◽  
Ángel Tejada-Ponce ◽  
Josiane Bonnefoy ◽  
Francisco Escribano-Sotos
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 113 ◽  
pp. 103969
Author(s):  
Shoushuo Wang ◽  
Zhigang Du ◽  
Guojun Chen ◽  
Haoran Zheng ◽  
Zhennong Tang ◽  
...  

Land ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 330
Author(s):  
Jean-Christophe Castella ◽  
Sonnasack Phaipasith

Road expansion has played a prominent role in the agrarian transition that marked the integration of swidden-based farming systems into the market economy in Southeast Asia. Rural roads deeply altered the landscape and livelihood structures by allowing the penetration of boom crops such as hybrid maize in remote territories. In this article, we investigate the impact of rural road developments on livelihoods in northern Laos through a longitudinal study conducted over a period of 15 years in a forest frontier. We studied adaptive management strategies of local stakeholders through the combination of individual surveys, focus group discussions, participatory mapping and remote-sensing approaches. The study revealed the short-term benefits of the maize feeder roads on poverty alleviation and rural development, but also the negative long-term effects on agroecosystem health and agricultural productivity related to unsustainable land use. Lessons learnt about the mechanisms of agricultural intensification helped understanding the constraints faced by external interventions promoting sustainable land management practices. When negotiated by local communities for their own interest, roads may provide livelihood-enhancing opportunities through access to external resources, rather than undermining them.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 1417
Author(s):  
Jiguang Dai ◽  
Rongchen Ma ◽  
Litao Gong ◽  
Zimo Shen ◽  
Jialin Wu

Road extraction in rural areas is one of the most fundamental tasks in the practical application of remote sensing. In recent years, sample-driven methods have achieved state-of-the-art performance in road extraction tasks. However, sample-driven methods are prohibitively expensive and laborious, especially when dealing with rural roads with irregular curvature changes, narrow widths, and diverse materials. The template matching method can overcome these difficulties to some extent and achieve impressive road extraction results. This method also has the advantage of the vectorization of road extraction results, but the automation is limited. Straight line sequences can be substituted for curves, and the use of the color space can increase the recognition of roads and nonroads. A model-driven-to-sample-driven road extraction method for rural areas with a much higher degree of automation than existing template matching methods is proposed in this study. Without prior samples, on the basis of the geometric characteristics of narrow and long roads and using the advantages of straight lines instead of curved lines, the road center point extraction model is established through length constraints and gray mean contrast constraints of line sequences, and the extraction of some rural roads is completed through topological connection analysis. In addition, we take the extracted road center point and manual input data as local samples, use the improved line segment histogram to determine the local road direction, and use the panchromatic and hue, saturation, value (HSV) space interactive matching model as the matching measure to complete the road tracking extraction. Experimental results show that, for different types of data and scenarios on the premise, the accuracy and recall rate of the evaluation indicators reach more than 98%, and, compared with other methods, the automation of this algorithm has increased by more than 40%.


2016 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 1032-1039 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaisung Choi ◽  
Youngrok Kim ◽  
Torsten Bergh ◽  
Sangyoup Kim ◽  
Sungkyu Kim

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