Cover image for Extreme conflict and tropical forests
Title:
Extreme conflict and tropical forests
Series:
WORLD FORESTS, 5
Publication Information:
Dordrecht, Netherlands : Springer, 2007
Physical Description:
x, 184 p. : ill., maps ; 25 cm.
ISBN:
9781402054617

9781402054624
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Also available online version
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30000010148708 SD414.T76 E96 2007 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

There are many compelling reasons for policymakers to pay more attention to forested regions and invest more resources there. Forests provide valuable products and en- ronmental services and several hundred million extremely poor people live near them. Perhaps the most compelling reason of all, however, is that unless policymakers take forest governance seriously and respond better to the needs of the people living there, these regions will continue to be breeding grounds for violent con?ict, banditry, and illicit crops. From Nicaragua's Atlantic Coast to the jungles of Cambodia, there are several dozen countries around the world that have experienced severe breakdowns in law and order in their forested regions. In many of these cases those breakdowns had widespread economic, social, and political consequences that have threatened entire societies. You would think that after all of the suffering over the last few decades in the forested regions of Colombia, Peru, Mexico, Guatemala, the two Congo's, Liberia, Mozambique, Philippines, Solomon Islands, Nepal, Angola, Rwanda, Nicaragua, Cote ^ d'Ivoire, Myanmar, Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Sierra Leone, Senegal, Sudan, Uganda, and Vietnam people would begin to take note. After all, they don't call it jungle warfare for nothing.


Table of Contents

Deanna Donovan and Wil de Jong and Ken-ichi AbePhilippe Le Billon and Simon SpringerRuben De KoningA. Carla Staver and Wil De Jong and David KaimowitzYay oi Fujita and Khamla Phanvilay and Deanna DonovanLarry A. SwatukSteven Price and Deanna Donovan and Wil De JongMaria D. AlvarezGoro NakamuraJeffrey A. Mcneely
Tables and Figuresp. vii
Forewordp. ix
Chapter 1 Tropical Forests and Extreme Conflictp. 1
Chapter 2 Between War and Peace: Violence and Accommodation in the Cambodian Logging Sectorp. 17
Chapter 3 Greed or Grievance in West Africa's Forest Wars?p. 37
Chapter 4 Nicaragua's Frontier: The Bosawas Biosphere Reservep. 57
Chapter 5 Past Conflicts and Resource Use in Postwar Lao PDRp. 75
Chapter 6 Seeing the Forest for the Trees: Tropical Forests, the State and Violent Conflict in Africap. 93
Chapter 7 Confronting Conflict Timberp. 117
Chapter 8 Environmental Damage from Illicit Drug Crops in Colombiap. 133
Chapter 9 Defoliation During the Vietnam Warp. 149
Chapter 10 Addressing Extreme Conflicts Through Peace Parksp. 159
Indexp. 173