The political ecology of tropical forests in Southeast Asia: historical roots of modern problems

A simplistic explanation of why tropical forests degrade or disappear all together is, because loggers take out too many trees, companies convert forest for plantations, and small farmers slash forest to make agricultural fields. Political ecology is a scientific inter-discipline that tries to ident...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jong, W. de, Tuk-Po, L., Ken-Ichi, Abe
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Kyoto University Press 2003
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18691
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author Jong, W. de
Tuk-Po, L.
Ken-Ichi, Abe
author_browse Jong, W. de
Ken-Ichi, Abe
Tuk-Po, L.
author_facet Jong, W. de
Tuk-Po, L.
Ken-Ichi, Abe
author_sort Jong, W. de
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A simplistic explanation of why tropical forests degrade or disappear all together is, because loggers take out too many trees, companies convert forest for plantations, and small farmers slash forest to make agricultural fields. Political ecology is a scientific inter-discipline that tries to identify the political dimension of forest resource appropriation, contestation over forest benefits, and the role of power and discourse in the processes of unsustainable use and resulting forest degradation. This chapter summarizes ten chapters in the volume in which it is published. Several of chapters demonstrate that modern struggles over forests have their roots in colonial periods. Colonial powers used force, but also the argument that deforestation negatively affected the local climate, to expulse forest farmers from timber rich forest lands. Often control of the trade of lucrative forest products like rattan was decided by force. In these struggles, colonial powers used force against local Sultans, local Sultans used force against forest dwellers, and powerful forest dweller groups used force against weaker groups.
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spelling CGSpace186912025-01-24T14:13:15Z The political ecology of tropical forests in Southeast Asia: historical roots of modern problems Jong, W. de Tuk-Po, L. Ken-Ichi, Abe tropical forests natural resources uses environmental impact politics socioeconomics history A simplistic explanation of why tropical forests degrade or disappear all together is, because loggers take out too many trees, companies convert forest for plantations, and small farmers slash forest to make agricultural fields. Political ecology is a scientific inter-discipline that tries to identify the political dimension of forest resource appropriation, contestation over forest benefits, and the role of power and discourse in the processes of unsustainable use and resulting forest degradation. This chapter summarizes ten chapters in the volume in which it is published. Several of chapters demonstrate that modern struggles over forests have their roots in colonial periods. Colonial powers used force, but also the argument that deforestation negatively affected the local climate, to expulse forest farmers from timber rich forest lands. Often control of the trade of lucrative forest products like rattan was decided by force. In these struggles, colonial powers used force against local Sultans, local Sultans used force against forest dwellers, and powerful forest dweller groups used force against weaker groups. 2003 2012-06-04T09:08:42Z 2012-06-04T09:08:42Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18691 en Kyoto University Press de Jong, W., Tuk-Po, L., Ken-ichi, A. 2003. The political ecology of tropical forests in Southeast Asia: historical roots of modern problems . Kyoto Area Studies on Asia No.v. 6. In: de Jong, W., Tuk-Po, L., Ken-ichi, A. (eds.). The political ecology of tropical forests in Southeast Asia: historical perspectives. :1-28. Kyoto, Kyoto University Press.
spellingShingle tropical forests
natural resources
uses
environmental impact
politics
socioeconomics
history
Jong, W. de
Tuk-Po, L.
Ken-Ichi, Abe
The political ecology of tropical forests in Southeast Asia: historical roots of modern problems
title The political ecology of tropical forests in Southeast Asia: historical roots of modern problems
title_full The political ecology of tropical forests in Southeast Asia: historical roots of modern problems
title_fullStr The political ecology of tropical forests in Southeast Asia: historical roots of modern problems
title_full_unstemmed The political ecology of tropical forests in Southeast Asia: historical roots of modern problems
title_short The political ecology of tropical forests in Southeast Asia: historical roots of modern problems
title_sort political ecology of tropical forests in southeast asia historical roots of modern problems
topic tropical forests
natural resources
uses
environmental impact
politics
socioeconomics
history
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18691
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