Bültmann & Gerriets
Extreme Conflict and Tropical Forests
von Wil De Jong, Ken-Ichi Abe, Deanna Donovan
Verlag: Springer Netherlands
Reihe: World Forests Nr. 5
Hardcover
ISBN: 9789400795839
Auflage: 2007
Erschienen am 02.11.2014
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 235 mm [H] x 155 mm [B] x 11 mm [T]
Gewicht: 306 Gramm
Umfang: 196 Seiten

Preis: 106,99 €
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Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

1. Tropical forests and extreme conflict; D. Donovan et al.- 2. Between war and peace: violence and accommodation in the Cambodian logging sector; P. Le Billon, S. Springer.- 3. Greed or grievance in West Africäs forest wars?; R. de Koning.- 4. Nicaraguäs frontier: the Bosawas biosphere reserve; A.C. Staver et al.- 5. Past conflicts and resource use in postwar Lao PDR; Y. Fujita et al.- 6. Seeing the forest for the trees: tropical forests, the state and violent conflict in Africa; L.A. Swatuk.- 7. Confronting conflict timber; S. Price et al.- 8. Environmental damage from illicit drug crops in Colombia; M.D. Álvarez.- 9. Defoliation during the Vietnam War; G. Nakamura.- 10. Addressing extreme conflicts through peace parks; J.A. McNeely.-



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 Nicaraguäs 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.


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