The underlying causes of forest decline

Loggers, miners and rural communities all exploit forests in unsustainable ways in search of profits and means of subsistence. They are the primary actors in forest decline and their immediate motivations are the direct causes of deforestation and degradation. However, these motivations are determin...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Contreras Hermosilla, A.
Formato: Libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Center for International Forestry Research 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18123
_version_ 1855513173204926464
author Contreras Hermosilla, A.
author_browse Contreras Hermosilla, A.
author_facet Contreras Hermosilla, A.
author_sort Contreras Hermosilla, A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Loggers, miners and rural communities all exploit forests in unsustainable ways in search of profits and means of subsistence. They are the primary actors in forest decline and their immediate motivations are the direct causes of deforestation and degradation. However, these motivations are determined, through complex causation chains, by deeper and much more fundamental forces: the underlying causes of deforestation. Effective action against forest decline requires an understanding of these underlying causes and their distant impacts on forests. Underlying causes originate in some of the most basic features of society, such as the distribution of economic and political power, attitudes towards corruption, population growth, flaws in the market system and in seemingly unrelated government policies. They may originate in other countries and transmit their effects through trade and the operation of transnational corporations. Underlying causes are many and operate in numerous and variable combinations. Forest decline is a complex socio-economic, cultural and political event. Thus, it is a mistake to attribute forest decline to a simple cause-effect relationship or assume that a relationship will remain unaltered over time. A single force, such as agricultural intensification, may operate in diametrically opposite ways, depending of the context of other variables and circumstances prevailing in a particular situation. Accordingly, remedial measures need to be tailored to the very specific milieu in which they will be introduced. There are no simple solutions to this complex phenomenon.
format Libro
id CGSpace18123
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2000
publishDateRange 2000
publishDateSort 2000
publisher Center for International Forestry Research
publisherStr Center for International Forestry Research
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace181232025-01-24T14:11:46Z The underlying causes of forest decline Contreras Hermosilla, A. forest decline deforestation degraded forests land use forestry policies state intervention socioeconomics Loggers, miners and rural communities all exploit forests in unsustainable ways in search of profits and means of subsistence. They are the primary actors in forest decline and their immediate motivations are the direct causes of deforestation and degradation. However, these motivations are determined, through complex causation chains, by deeper and much more fundamental forces: the underlying causes of deforestation. Effective action against forest decline requires an understanding of these underlying causes and their distant impacts on forests. Underlying causes originate in some of the most basic features of society, such as the distribution of economic and political power, attitudes towards corruption, population growth, flaws in the market system and in seemingly unrelated government policies. They may originate in other countries and transmit their effects through trade and the operation of transnational corporations. Underlying causes are many and operate in numerous and variable combinations. Forest decline is a complex socio-economic, cultural and political event. Thus, it is a mistake to attribute forest decline to a simple cause-effect relationship or assume that a relationship will remain unaltered over time. A single force, such as agricultural intensification, may operate in diametrically opposite ways, depending of the context of other variables and circumstances prevailing in a particular situation. Accordingly, remedial measures need to be tailored to the very specific milieu in which they will be introduced. There are no simple solutions to this complex phenomenon. 2000 2012-06-04T09:06:07Z 2012-06-04T09:06:07Z Book https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18123 en Open Access Center for International Forestry Research Contreras-Hermosilla, A. 2000. The underlying causes of forest decline . CIFOR Occasional Paper No.30. Bogor, Indonesia, CIFOR. 25p.
spellingShingle forest decline
deforestation
degraded forests
land use
forestry policies
state intervention
socioeconomics
Contreras Hermosilla, A.
The underlying causes of forest decline
title The underlying causes of forest decline
title_full The underlying causes of forest decline
title_fullStr The underlying causes of forest decline
title_full_unstemmed The underlying causes of forest decline
title_short The underlying causes of forest decline
title_sort underlying causes of forest decline
topic forest decline
deforestation
degraded forests
land use
forestry policies
state intervention
socioeconomics
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18123
work_keys_str_mv AT contrerashermosillaa theunderlyingcausesofforestdecline
AT contrerashermosillaa underlyingcausesofforestdecline