Pitfalls for the sustainability of forest transitions: evidence from Southeast Asia

The concept of a forest transition – a regional shift from deforestation to forest recovery – tends to equate forest area expansion with sustainability, assuming that more forest is good for people and the environment. To promote debate and more just and ecologically sustainable outcomes during this...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental conservation 2024-09, Vol.51 (3), p.152-162
Hauptverfasser: Kull, Christian A, Bartmess, Jennifer, Dressler, Wolfram, Gingrich, Simone, Grodzicki, Maciej, Jasikowska, Katarzyna, Łapniewska, Zofia, Mansourian, Stephanie, Nguyen, Van Thi Hai, Persson, Joel, Pichler, Melanie, Rajaonarivelo, Herimino Manoa, Robert, Amélie, Tran, Thang Nam, Woods, Kevin
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container_end_page 162
container_issue 3
container_start_page 152
container_title Environmental conservation
container_volume 51
creator Kull, Christian A
Bartmess, Jennifer
Dressler, Wolfram
Gingrich, Simone
Grodzicki, Maciej
Jasikowska, Katarzyna
Łapniewska, Zofia
Mansourian, Stephanie
Nguyen, Van Thi Hai
Persson, Joel
Pichler, Melanie
Rajaonarivelo, Herimino Manoa
Robert, Amélie
Tran, Thang Nam
Woods, Kevin
description The concept of a forest transition – a regional shift from deforestation to forest recovery – tends to equate forest area expansion with sustainability, assuming that more forest is good for people and the environment. To promote debate and more just and ecologically sustainable outcomes during this period of intense focus on forests (such as the United Nations’ Decade on Ecological Restoration, the Trillion Trees initiative and at the United Nations’ Climate Change Conferences), we synthesize recent nuanced and integrated research to inform forest management and restoration in the future. Our results reveal nine pitfalls to assuming forest transitions and sustainability are automatically linked. The pitfalls are as follows: (1) fixating on forest quantity instead of quality; (2) masking local diversity with large-scale trends; (3) expecting U-shaped temporal trends of forest change; (4) failing to account for irreversibility; (5) framing categories and concepts as universal/neutral; (6) diverting attention from the simplification of forestlands into single-purpose conservation forests or intensive production lands; (7) neglecting social power transitions and dispossessions; (8) neglecting productivism as the hidden driving force; and (9) ignoring local agency and sentiments. We develop and illustrate these pitfalls with local- and national-level evidence from Southeast Asia and outline forward-looking recommendations for research and policy to address them. Forest transition research that neglects these pitfalls risks legitimizing unsustainable and unjust policies and programmes of forest restoration or tree planting.
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source CUP_剑桥大学出版社现刊
subjects Environmental Sciences
title Pitfalls for the sustainability of forest transitions: evidence from Southeast Asia
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