The role of land inequality in the poverty-forest loss nexus patterns: A case study from Chile

被引:1
作者
Nahuelhual, Laura [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Jullian, Cristobal [2 ]
Von Below, Jonathan [4 ,5 ]
Laterra, Pedro [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Los Lagos, Dept Ciencias Sociales, Osorno, Chile
[2] Univ Austral Chile, Ctr Invest Dinam Ecosistemas Marinos Altas Latitud, Campus Isla Teja s n, Valdivia, Chile
[3] Inst Milenio Socio Ecol Costera, Santiago, Chile
[4] Univ Nacl Mis, Fac Ciencias Forestales, Lab Etnobiol & Desarrollo Comunitario, Misiones, Argentina
[5] Consejo Nacl Invest Cient & Tecn, Fdn Bariloche, Rosario, Argentina
关键词
Land reforms; Neoliberal forest policies; Neoliberal conservation; Rural poverty alleviation; POLITICAL ECOLOGY; EXOTIC PLANTATIONS; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; NATIVE FORESTS; CONSERVATION; LIVELIHOODS; SOUTH; DEFORESTATION; REFORM; POLICY;
D O I
10.1016/j.jrurstud.2023.103192
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
The predominant school of thought argues that poverty is a major cause of deforestation, but several studies have begun to contest this assumption by putting forward that a complex web of factors influences this connection and that multi-patterned nexuses can exist. We explore these nexuses taking southern Chile as a case study and using a Path Analysis for modelling. We relied on secondary data at the land property and municipality levels to construct the exogenous (land inequality, farm and forestry subsidies, and firewood consumption) and endogenous variables of the model (poverty, native forest loss, non-native tree afforestation, ecosystem services supply), which runs at the municipality scale (n = 147). We obtained a very good model adjustment as indicated by common goodness of fit measures. The model's path coefficients showed that land inequality (measured with the Gini coefficient) had a positive direct effect on poverty and forest loss. In turn, poverty had a negative direct effect on forest loss, whereas forest loss had a total negative effect on poverty. Thus, poverty per se does not cause forest loss or vice versa, and rather than a single poverty-forest loss nexus, "many-patterned" nexuses arise. We discus three of these patterns, namely i) development that aggravates poverty, ii) land inequality that aggravates forest loss and poverty, and iii) land inequality that "helps" the cause of forest conservation. These results suggest that policies that seek to solve poverty (e.g., farm subsidies) will not necessarily help prevent forest loss, but neither will neoliberal forest and conservation policies alone. As the SDGs state, solving inequality seems to be a necessary condition for both alleviating poverty and ensuring forest conservation.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 167 条
  • [11] More Trees, More Poverty? The Socioeconomic Effects of Tree Plantations in Chile, 2001-2011
    Andersson, Krister
    Lawrence, Duncan
    Zavaleta, Jennifer
    Guariguata, Manuel R.
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2016, 57 (01) : 123 - 136
  • [12] [Anonymous], 2017, Sustainable Development Goals and Income Inequality
  • [13] [Anonymous], 2015, Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, DOI [10.1080/02513625.2015.1038080, DOI 10.1080/02513625.2015.1038080]
  • [14] Anseeuw W., 2020, Uneven ground. Land inequality at the heart of unequal societies
  • [15] Arbuckle J.L., 2014, Amos (Version 23.0)
  • [16] Deforestation dynamics and drivers in different forest types in Latin America: Three decades of studies (1980-2010)
    Armenteras, Dolors
    Maria Espelta, Josep
    Rodriguez, Nelly
    Retana, Javier
    [J]. GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS, 2017, 46 : 139 - 147
  • [17] Mutual Effects of Land Distribution and Economic Development: Evidence from Asia, Africa, and Latin America
    Azadi, Hossein
    Vanhaute, Eric
    [J]. LAND, 2019, 8 (06)
  • [18] Conflicts for control of Mapuche-Pehuenche land and natural resources in the Biobio highlands, Chile
    Azocar, Gerardo
    Sanhueza, Rodrigo
    Aguayo, Mauricio
    Romero, Hugo
    Munoz, Maria D.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF LATIN AMERICAN GEOGRAPHY, 2005, 4 (02) : 57 - 76
  • [19] Barbier E., 2015, Nature and wealth: Overcoming environmental scarcity and inequality
  • [20] Poverty, rural population distribution and climate change
    Barbier, Edward B.
    Hochard, Jacob P.
    [J]. ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, 2018, 23 (03) : 234 - 256