Amazon deforestation revisited

This paper reviews the shifts in thinking as reflected in eight recent books that discuss deforestation in the Amazon. It looks first at whether the land uses that replace forests are profitable and sustainable without subsidies and then examines how technology, tenure, credit, and roads affect defo...

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Main Author: Kaimowitz, D.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18571
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author Kaimowitz, D.
author_browse Kaimowitz, D.
author_facet Kaimowitz, D.
author_sort Kaimowitz, D.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This paper reviews the shifts in thinking as reflected in eight recent books that discuss deforestation in the Amazon. It looks first at whether the land uses that replace forests are profitable and sustainable without subsidies and then examines how technology, tenure, credit, and roads affect deforestation and the role of large and small landowners. It then analyses the potential of sustainable land-use alternatives for reducing deforestation. The following sections look at logging and forest fires. Drawing on the previous discussion, it then becomes possible to assess who will benefit from clearing forests or conserving them and who may pay the costs. Subsequent sections discuss indigenous territories and protected areas, macroeconomic issues, decentralization, and urban-rural interactions. Several other books under review examine other issues in addition to deforestation and consider regions outside the Amazon. This review concentrates only on the parts of these books that focus on Amazon deforestation. Most of the discussion focuses on Brazil, Bolivia, and Ecuador.
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spelling CGSpace185712025-01-24T14:20:28Z Amazon deforestation revisited Kaimowitz, D. deforestation land use economics tenure systems technology logging forest fires This paper reviews the shifts in thinking as reflected in eight recent books that discuss deforestation in the Amazon. It looks first at whether the land uses that replace forests are profitable and sustainable without subsidies and then examines how technology, tenure, credit, and roads affect deforestation and the role of large and small landowners. It then analyses the potential of sustainable land-use alternatives for reducing deforestation. The following sections look at logging and forest fires. Drawing on the previous discussion, it then becomes possible to assess who will benefit from clearing forests or conserving them and who may pay the costs. Subsequent sections discuss indigenous territories and protected areas, macroeconomic issues, decentralization, and urban-rural interactions. Several other books under review examine other issues in addition to deforestation and consider regions outside the Amazon. This review concentrates only on the parts of these books that focus on Amazon deforestation. Most of the discussion focuses on Brazil, Bolivia, and Ecuador. 2002 2012-06-04T09:08:34Z 2012-06-04T09:08:34Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18571 en Kaimowitz, D. 2002. Amazon deforestation revisited . Latin American Research Review 37 (2) :221-235.
spellingShingle deforestation
land use
economics
tenure systems
technology
logging
forest fires
Kaimowitz, D.
Amazon deforestation revisited
title Amazon deforestation revisited
title_full Amazon deforestation revisited
title_fullStr Amazon deforestation revisited
title_full_unstemmed Amazon deforestation revisited
title_short Amazon deforestation revisited
title_sort amazon deforestation revisited
topic deforestation
land use
economics
tenure systems
technology
logging
forest fires
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18571
work_keys_str_mv AT kaimowitzd amazondeforestationrevisited