Pasar al contenido principal

page search

Displaying 11329 - 11340 of 13143

Logging Burma's Frontier Forests

LandLibrary Resource
Reports & Research
Noviembre, 1997
Myanmar

Lots of maps...Burma holds half of the remaining forest in mainland Southeast Asia. Having lost virtually all of their original forest cover, Burma's neighbors -- China, India, and Thailand -- rely increasingly on Burma as a source of timber. Most of the regional timber trade is illegal. (See The Regional Timber Trade in Southeast Asia.)

Kawthoolei and Teak: Karen Forest Management on the Thai-Burmese Border

LandLibrary Resource
Reports & Research
Septiembre, 1997
Myanmar

The Karen State of Kawthoolei has been heavily dependent on teak extraction to fund the Karen National
Union struggle against the Burmese military junta, the State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC).
Raymond Bryant explores the social and economic structure of Kawthoolei, and the way in which resource

Causas estructurales de la deforestación en la amazonía ecuatoriana

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
Abril, 1997
Ecuador

La deuda externa, la creciente dependencia tecnológica, el sesgo en la injusta distribución de la tierra, la presión del mercado internacional sobre las materias primas carburantes y no carburantes existentes en la selva, la irracionalidad extractiva y otra serie de factores, son los causantes de la desestabilización ecológica en la región amazónica

National Policy on Forests 1997.

LandLibrary Resource
National Policies
Abril, 1997
Polonia

The National Policy on Forests developed by the Ministry of Environmental Protection, Natural Resources and Forestry is a nation-wide sectoral document for designating the complex of actions shaping relations between humankind and forests, with the aim of preserving the conditions for the indefinite maintenance of the multi-functionality of forests, their multi-faceted utility and protection an

From Dutch disease to deforestation - a macroeconomic link? A case study from Ecuador

LandLibrary Resource
Diciembre, 1996
Ecuador
América Latina y el Caribe

In the literature about macroeconomics and deforestation, it is often supposed that strong foreign exchange outflows (e.g. debt service) increase deforestation, as higher poverty augments frontier migration and natural resources are squeezed to generate export revenues. This paper analyses the opposite phenomenon, i.e.