Preface.- Introduction.- Part 1: Geospheric Circulations.- Chapter 1 Reconsidering Development Mechanisms of Tropical Agriculture: Focusing on Micro-development in Mainland Southeast Asia.- Chapter 2 Fueling Transformation in the Mekong: Thailand's Trade in Agro-energy.- Part 2: Eco-resources and their Economic Significance.- Chapter 3 Towards Carbon Certificate in Vietnam: Net Ecosystem Production and Basic Income for Local Community.- Chapter 4 Soil Information as a Reforestation Decision-making Tool and Implication for Sustainable Forest Management in the Philippines.- Chapter 5 Indonesian Peatland Functions: Peatland Restoration and Sustainable Peatland Management for the Benefit of Local Community, Case Study in Riau and West Kalimantan Provinces.- Chapter 6 Agribusiness, Overdevelopment and Palm Oil Industrial Restructuring in Malaysia.- Chapter 7 Honey Bees in Modernized Southeast Asia: Adaptation or Extinction?.- Part 3: The Politics of Energy and Resources-use.- Chapter 8 The Rise of Organic Agriculture in the Philippines and its Development.- Chapter 9 Livelihood after the Dams: Experiences of Tributary dams in the Mekong River.- Chapter 10 Livelihoods Activities of Swiddeners Under the Transition of Swidden Agriculture: A Case Study in a Khmu Village, Northern Laos.- Chapter 11 Conclusion: Towards a Research-based Praxis on Southeast Asia's Ecosystems.
Mario Lopez is an Associate Professor at the Centre for Southeast Asia Studies, Kyoto University. He received his PhD from the Graduate School of Social and Cultural Studies at Kyushu University in 2012. His research interests are on humans, mobility, ageing and sustainability in Southeast Asia. He has published widely on these areas and is also a co-developer of the Humanosphere Potentiality Index, a database developed to address current global potentiality with a focus on tropical countries. In addition, Mario is involved in a Visual Documentary Project in collaboration with the Japan Foundation Asian Centre to stimulate discussion and develop dialogues for new research on Southeast Asian communities.
Jafar Suryomenggolo is an Assistant Professor at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, Japan. He graduated from the University of Indonesia with a degree in Law in 2000 and earned his PhD in Southeast Asian Studies in 2010 fromKyoto University. Jafar's research interests are on working class politics and political changes in contemporary Southeast Asia. He is an author and editor of several articles, book reviews, book chapters and books in these areas.
This edited volume introduces dynamic approaches to the study of Southeast Asiäs environmental diversity from different disciplinary perspectives at the interface between the natural and social sciences. It brings together research on the region¿s environmental resource use and shared ecological challenges in the context of present day globalization to offer insights for possible future directions. The book introduces unique approaches to the study of Southeast Asiäs environmental changes and resource management under the influence of intensifying economic change in the region. It also examines the slow erosion of Southeast Asiäs rich environment and addresses serious issues such as the decrease in biodiversity and tropical forests, and the degradation of peat lands. At the same time, it discusses the social issues that are tied to energy-dependent growth and have intensified over the last two decades. It also analyzes the new roadmaps being created to protect, conserve, andmanage the environment. By investigating the many ecological issues surrounding us, the volume brings to light the constant struggles we face while trying to develop a more inclusive and equitable approach to natural resources governance. This volume is relevant for students, academics and researchers who have an interest in the Southeast Asian environment and the way in which we use and interact with it.