Family farming in the Maghreb No 219, 2006/3 - pagesPages 5 to 6EditorialPages 19 to 28IntroductionBy Georges Courade, Jean-Claude DevèzePages 29 to 42The future of Tunisian agriculture under trade liberalizationBy Jean-François RichardPages 43 to 61The Middle Sebou Region of Morocco: Farmers caught between local constraints and the demands of globalizationBy Nicolas FornagePages 63 to 79Policies and strategies of livestock farmers in Sidi Bouzid Governorate (central Tunisia)By Mohamed Elloumi, Véronique Alary, Salah SelmiPages 81 to 101Adoption of Innovation in Vulnerable Agro-pastoral Areas in the MaghrebBy Véronique AlaryPages 103 to 117Common rangeland management in agro-pastoral areas: Ait Ammar's Case Study (Morocco)By Céline Dutilly-DianePages 119 to 135Nigeria: Caught between the paradox of plenty and democratization without democracyBy Daniel C. BachPages 137 to 149India in Africa: Analysis and limitations of a policyBy François LafarguePages 151 to 161Darfur: Undesirable refugees in the South as well as in the North?By Marc-André LagrangePages 163 to 172South Africa and Nigeria: From peace keeping to the quest for a strategic position on the African continentBy Jean-Bernard VéronPages 173 to 201The "0.7%" myth: The origins and relevance of the international aid targetBy Michael A. Clemens, Todd J. MossPages 203 to 207Nourrir la planète (Feeding the Planet) by Michel GriffonBy Jacques Giri