Three decades of deforestation in southwest Sumatra: effects of coffee prices, law enforcement and rural poverty

In situ conservation of tropical forests often requires restricting human use and occupancy within protected areas by enforcing regulations. However, law enforcement interventions that seek to prevent deforestation rarely have been evaluated. Conservationists increasingly recognize the need to measu...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gaveau, D.L.A., Linkie, M., Suyadi, Levang, P., Leader-Williams, N.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20171
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author Gaveau, D.L.A.
Linkie, M.
Suyadi
Levang, P.
Leader-Williams, N.
author_browse Gaveau, D.L.A.
Leader-Williams, N.
Levang, P.
Linkie, M.
Suyadi
author_facet Gaveau, D.L.A.
Linkie, M.
Suyadi
Levang, P.
Leader-Williams, N.
author_sort Gaveau, D.L.A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In situ conservation of tropical forests often requires restricting human use and occupancy within protected areas by enforcing regulations. However, law enforcement interventions that seek to prevent deforestation rarely have been evaluated. Conservationists increasingly recognize the need to measure the effectiveness of their interventions, using an indicator of biodiversity change, such as rate of deforestation, and a counterfactual approach that addresses a fundamental question: what would have happened had there been no intervention? This study examines how law enforcement can mitigate habitat loss from small-holder coffee growing by comparing 34 years of empirical data on deforestation rates and coffee prices across a zone of high law enforcement and a zone of low law enforcement using satellite imagery, ecological data, interviews, and GIS modeling. In the early 1980s strong law enforcement efforts were found to reduce deforestation inside Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park (BBSNP), southwest Sumatra. However, law enforcement efforts were weak in remote areas of BBSNP, where high coffee prices spurred rapid deforestation. Furthermore, law enforcement efforts were reversed by the 1997-1998 Asian economic crisis. the fall of the national president, and by new regulations surrounding regional autonomy. These findings indicate that law enforcement is critical but insufficient alone. They also highlight that rising costs of agricultural commodities can be detrimental to tropical forests and their associated biodiversity. In the long run one must act to decrease the incentives for coffee cultivation. A multi-faceted strategy that includes law enforcement and incentives to reduce poverty around PAS is proposed.
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spelling CGSpace201712025-01-24T14:12:45Z Three decades of deforestation in southwest Sumatra: effects of coffee prices, law enforcement and rural poverty Gaveau, D.L.A. Linkie, M. Suyadi Levang, P. Leader-Williams, N. protected areas law deforestation coffee prices biodiversity conservation In situ conservation of tropical forests often requires restricting human use and occupancy within protected areas by enforcing regulations. However, law enforcement interventions that seek to prevent deforestation rarely have been evaluated. Conservationists increasingly recognize the need to measure the effectiveness of their interventions, using an indicator of biodiversity change, such as rate of deforestation, and a counterfactual approach that addresses a fundamental question: what would have happened had there been no intervention? This study examines how law enforcement can mitigate habitat loss from small-holder coffee growing by comparing 34 years of empirical data on deforestation rates and coffee prices across a zone of high law enforcement and a zone of low law enforcement using satellite imagery, ecological data, interviews, and GIS modeling. In the early 1980s strong law enforcement efforts were found to reduce deforestation inside Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park (BBSNP), southwest Sumatra. However, law enforcement efforts were weak in remote areas of BBSNP, where high coffee prices spurred rapid deforestation. Furthermore, law enforcement efforts were reversed by the 1997-1998 Asian economic crisis. the fall of the national president, and by new regulations surrounding regional autonomy. These findings indicate that law enforcement is critical but insufficient alone. They also highlight that rising costs of agricultural commodities can be detrimental to tropical forests and their associated biodiversity. In the long run one must act to decrease the incentives for coffee cultivation. A multi-faceted strategy that includes law enforcement and incentives to reduce poverty around PAS is proposed. 2009 2012-06-04T09:13:07Z 2012-06-04T09:13:07Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20171 en Gaveau, D.L.A., Linkie, M., Suyadi, Levang, P., Leader-Williams, N. 2009. Three decades of deforestation in southwest Sumatra: effects of coffee prices, law enforcement and rural poverty . Biological Conservation 142 (3) :597-605. ISSN: 0006-3207.
spellingShingle protected areas
law
deforestation
coffee
prices
biodiversity
conservation
Gaveau, D.L.A.
Linkie, M.
Suyadi
Levang, P.
Leader-Williams, N.
Three decades of deforestation in southwest Sumatra: effects of coffee prices, law enforcement and rural poverty
title Three decades of deforestation in southwest Sumatra: effects of coffee prices, law enforcement and rural poverty
title_full Three decades of deforestation in southwest Sumatra: effects of coffee prices, law enforcement and rural poverty
title_fullStr Three decades of deforestation in southwest Sumatra: effects of coffee prices, law enforcement and rural poverty
title_full_unstemmed Three decades of deforestation in southwest Sumatra: effects of coffee prices, law enforcement and rural poverty
title_short Three decades of deforestation in southwest Sumatra: effects of coffee prices, law enforcement and rural poverty
title_sort three decades of deforestation in southwest sumatra effects of coffee prices law enforcement and rural poverty
topic protected areas
law
deforestation
coffee
prices
biodiversity
conservation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20171
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