Land related grievances shape tropical forest-cover in areas affected by armed-conflict

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Standard

Land related grievances shape tropical forest-cover in areas affected by armed-conflict. / Nunez, Augusto Carlos Castro; Mertz, Ole; Buritica, Alexander; Sosa, Chrystian C.; Lee, Stephanie T.

I: Applied Geography, Bind 85, 2017, s. 39-50.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Nunez, ACC, Mertz, O, Buritica, A, Sosa, CC & Lee, ST 2017, 'Land related grievances shape tropical forest-cover in areas affected by armed-conflict', Applied Geography, bind 85, s. 39-50. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeog.2017.05.007

APA

Nunez, A. C. C., Mertz, O., Buritica, A., Sosa, C. C., & Lee, S. T. (2017). Land related grievances shape tropical forest-cover in areas affected by armed-conflict. Applied Geography, 85, 39-50. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeog.2017.05.007

Vancouver

Nunez ACC, Mertz O, Buritica A, Sosa CC, Lee ST. Land related grievances shape tropical forest-cover in areas affected by armed-conflict. Applied Geography. 2017;85:39-50. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeog.2017.05.007

Author

Nunez, Augusto Carlos Castro ; Mertz, Ole ; Buritica, Alexander ; Sosa, Chrystian C. ; Lee, Stephanie T. / Land related grievances shape tropical forest-cover in areas affected by armed-conflict. I: Applied Geography. 2017 ; Bind 85. s. 39-50.

Bibtex

@article{370d5af495c64564935fe5de2c35496e,
title = "Land related grievances shape tropical forest-cover in areas affected by armed-conflict",
abstract = "Armed-conflicts often occur in tropical areas considered to be of high {\textquoteleft}conservation-value{\textquoteright}, termed as such for their biodiversity or carbon-storage functions. Despite this important overlap, few studies have assessed how forest-biomass is affected by armed-conflicts. Thus, in this paper we develop a multinomial logit model to examine how outcomes of the interactions between carbon-storage, armed-conflict and deforestation rates are linked to social, institutional and economic factors. We use Colombia as a case study because of its protracted armed-conflict, high forest-cover, sustained deforestation rates and on-going peace processes. Our empirical results show that the impacts of armed-conflicts on forest-cover are connected to specific socio-economical processes, such as unequal land distribution and land-grabbing, which typically occurs as part of {\textquoteleft}agricultural colonization{\textquoteright}. Findings address a research gap by providing statistically sound evidence for associations between armed-conflicts and land-related grievances, which has rarely been demonstrated empirically. Our results also suggest that forest commons are associated with reduced armed-conflict, and simultaneously provide contributions to carbon storage and to meeting basic needs. Moreover, our forest-conflict transition models provide useful visual means to capture and relay to policymakers-the causes of forest cover-changes in a conflict-affected country. Finally, our findings imply that in dedicating their efforts to resolving land-ownership disputes, the Colombian government might uphold their international climate change commitments via reducing deforestation and hence forest based carbon emissions, while pursuing their national security objective via undermining opportunities for guerrilla groups to operate.",
keywords = "Armed conflicts, Climate change, Colombia, Forest conflicts, Forest conservation, Multinomial logit model, REDD+",
author = "Nunez, {Augusto Carlos Castro} and Ole Mertz and Alexander Buritica and Sosa, {Chrystian C.} and Lee, {Stephanie T.}",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1016/j.apgeog.2017.05.007",
language = "English",
volume = "85",
pages = "39--50",
journal = "Applied Geography",
issn = "0143-6228",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Land related grievances shape tropical forest-cover in areas affected by armed-conflict

AU - Nunez, Augusto Carlos Castro

AU - Mertz, Ole

AU - Buritica, Alexander

AU - Sosa, Chrystian C.

AU - Lee, Stephanie T.

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Armed-conflicts often occur in tropical areas considered to be of high ‘conservation-value’, termed as such for their biodiversity or carbon-storage functions. Despite this important overlap, few studies have assessed how forest-biomass is affected by armed-conflicts. Thus, in this paper we develop a multinomial logit model to examine how outcomes of the interactions between carbon-storage, armed-conflict and deforestation rates are linked to social, institutional and economic factors. We use Colombia as a case study because of its protracted armed-conflict, high forest-cover, sustained deforestation rates and on-going peace processes. Our empirical results show that the impacts of armed-conflicts on forest-cover are connected to specific socio-economical processes, such as unequal land distribution and land-grabbing, which typically occurs as part of ‘agricultural colonization’. Findings address a research gap by providing statistically sound evidence for associations between armed-conflicts and land-related grievances, which has rarely been demonstrated empirically. Our results also suggest that forest commons are associated with reduced armed-conflict, and simultaneously provide contributions to carbon storage and to meeting basic needs. Moreover, our forest-conflict transition models provide useful visual means to capture and relay to policymakers-the causes of forest cover-changes in a conflict-affected country. Finally, our findings imply that in dedicating their efforts to resolving land-ownership disputes, the Colombian government might uphold their international climate change commitments via reducing deforestation and hence forest based carbon emissions, while pursuing their national security objective via undermining opportunities for guerrilla groups to operate.

AB - Armed-conflicts often occur in tropical areas considered to be of high ‘conservation-value’, termed as such for their biodiversity or carbon-storage functions. Despite this important overlap, few studies have assessed how forest-biomass is affected by armed-conflicts. Thus, in this paper we develop a multinomial logit model to examine how outcomes of the interactions between carbon-storage, armed-conflict and deforestation rates are linked to social, institutional and economic factors. We use Colombia as a case study because of its protracted armed-conflict, high forest-cover, sustained deforestation rates and on-going peace processes. Our empirical results show that the impacts of armed-conflicts on forest-cover are connected to specific socio-economical processes, such as unequal land distribution and land-grabbing, which typically occurs as part of ‘agricultural colonization’. Findings address a research gap by providing statistically sound evidence for associations between armed-conflicts and land-related grievances, which has rarely been demonstrated empirically. Our results also suggest that forest commons are associated with reduced armed-conflict, and simultaneously provide contributions to carbon storage and to meeting basic needs. Moreover, our forest-conflict transition models provide useful visual means to capture and relay to policymakers-the causes of forest cover-changes in a conflict-affected country. Finally, our findings imply that in dedicating their efforts to resolving land-ownership disputes, the Colombian government might uphold their international climate change commitments via reducing deforestation and hence forest based carbon emissions, while pursuing their national security objective via undermining opportunities for guerrilla groups to operate.

KW - Armed conflicts

KW - Climate change

KW - Colombia

KW - Forest conflicts

KW - Forest conservation

KW - Multinomial logit model

KW - REDD+

U2 - 10.1016/j.apgeog.2017.05.007

DO - 10.1016/j.apgeog.2017.05.007

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85020235979

VL - 85

SP - 39

EP - 50

JO - Applied Geography

JF - Applied Geography

SN - 0143-6228

ER -

ID: 180994415