ABSTRACT

This book is a fully up to date study of the major issues facing forest conservation and the forestry industry, which considers developments at local, national and global levels. Environmental and development topics relating to each level are discussed – for instance, the use of forest products in a rural poverty context, corruption and forest harvesting and consumption as a political device.

Delacote employs a quantitative approach in order to analyse the plight of tropical forests in the developing world, and in doing so produces a range of interesting conclusions. This methodology fills a crucial research gap in existing studies of forests in a development context – increased use of theoretical tools to interpret real life situations might be beneficial to the field. Therefore, the first objective of this book is to provide a sample of theoretical analysis concerning the forests and development nexus. The second objective is to supply empirical economists with new theoretical insights, with the hope that those results can emerge with conclusive field testing and relevant policy recommendations.

part I|12 pages

Overview

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part II|40 pages

Local

chapter 2|21 pages

Commons as insurance

Safety nets or poverty traps?

part III|48 pages

National

part IV|36 pages

Global

chapter 5|16 pages

Political consumerism and public policy

Good complements against market failures?