Sign up to our newsletter:

Case Studies

Please browse our case studies on how botanic gardens are improving human well-being through the use of biodiversity. Also visit our list of selected journal articles, on the right.

Healthcare

Geneva's Links With Community Medicine in Paraguay

Home Gardens in Ghana

Working to Meet Local Healthcare Needs in South Africa

Botanical Benefits in the Philippines

Malawi's Cultivation of Aphrodisiac

The Pragya Project on Conserving the Herbal Wealth of the Himalayas

 

Nutrition

Rural Resource Management In Peru

Rural Home Gardens near Lucknow, India

Promoting Nutritional Self-Sufficiency in Cuba

Vegetable Diversity in Mexico City

Edible Caterpillars in the Bas Congo

 

Financial Poverty Alleviation

Handicrafts and Earth Botanic Garden

Multiple Projects Improving Livelihoods at Limbe

Helping Farmers in Malabar

Project "Watu na Msitu" - Tanzania's Links with Italy

Cultivating Useful Plants in Uganda

The Andean Project, Chile

 

Community and Social Benefits

Bronx Green Up (BGU)

Future Plans: Rehabilitation in Dartmoor Prison

Young Mums Art & Poetry Workshop, Cambridge

Training for Useful Skills in Jerusalem

 

References

The sources of information for these case studies, the report, and more.



Botanic Gardens: Using Biodiversity to Improve Human Well-being

A report has been launched by BGCI on the role of botanic gardens in using plant diversity to improve human well-being. It features case studies from botanic gardens around the world and is available to all in PDF format.

Read more...

  

Find Out More

The Poverty / Conservation Equation
The Nature Conservancy increasingly recognises the need to take account of the links between poverty and conservation. Its summer 2006 newsletter presents a series of interesting and accessible articles, by respected authors, that discuss if conservation is relevant to the poor and vice versa.

 
Darwin's Harvest: Origins, Evolution, and Conservation of Crop Plants (Motley et al, 2006)
This book describes how a variety of temperate and tropical crop plants were domesticated, using a broad selection of research studies that use both traditional and contemporary tools. Edited by Timothy J. Motley, Nyree Zerega & Hugh Cross, and published February 2006.
Cultivate E-Bulletin
Cultivate bi-monthly e-bulletin brings you opinion, comment, case studies and surveys for and about the world's botanic gardens. Sign up today - click the link.
Have your say! BGCI Membership Questionnaire 2008
BGCI is striving to improve the services that we provide to our members. We need your help in order to do this. Please take 5 minutes to submit our Membership Questionnaire.