Conservation Of Neotropical Forests. Working From Traditional Resource Use

Christine Padoch

,

Kent-H Redford

Note moyenne 
Christine Padoch et Kent-H Redford - Conservation Of Neotropical Forests. Working From Traditional Resource Use.
The destruction of tropical forests is intimately intertwined with the fate of the rural poor who rely on this resource for their livelihood. Conservation... Lire la suite
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Résumé

The destruction of tropical forests is intimately intertwined with the fate of the rural poor who rely on this resource for their livelihood. Conservation of Neotropical Forests provides important information for understanding the interactions of forest peoples and forest resources in the lowland tropics of Central and South America. This interdisciplinary study features experts from both the natural and social sciences to illuminate the present dilemma of conserving neotropical resources. These contributors-who are responsible for some of the most promising work in cultural and biodiversity conservation-investigate the patterns of traditional resource use, evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of existing research, and explore innovative directions for furthering the interdisciplinary conservationist agenda. "Conservation of Neotropical Forests successfully bridges the gap between conservationists, anthropologists, and economists. Though it deals specifically with neotropical forests, it is essential reading for anyone involved in conservation of forests and their inhabitants, human or non-human, in all parts of the globe." -The Environmentalist

Sommaire

    • Traditional Peoples and the Biosphere: Framing the Issues and Defining the Terms
  • INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
    • Interpreting and Applying the "Reality" of Indigenous Concepts: What Is Necessary to Learn from the Natives? People of the Fallow: A Historical Ecology of Foraging in Lowland South America
    • Traditional Productive Systems of the Awa (Cuaiquer) Indians of Southwestern Colombia and Neighboring Ecuador
    • Resource Use, Traditional Technology, and Change Among Native Peoples of Lowland South America
    • Neotropical Indigenous Hunters and Their Neighbors: Siriono, Chimane, and Yuqui Hunting on the Bolivian Frontier
  • FOLK SOCIETIES
    • Caboclo and Ribereño Resource Management in Amazonia: A Review
    • Diversity, Variation, and Change in Ribereño Agriculture
    • The Logic of Extraction: Resource Management and Income Generation by Extractive Producers in the Amazon Estuary
  • CASE STUDIES OF RESOURCE MANAGEMENT PROJECTS IN PROTECTED AND UNPROTECTED AREAS: INSTITUTIONAL PERSPECTIVES
    • Xateros, Chicleros, and Pimenteros: Harvesting Renewable Tropical Forest Resources in the Guatemalan Peten
    • The Rio Bravo Conservation and Management Area of Belize
    • The Chimane Conservation Program in Beni, Bolivia: An Effort for Local Participation
    • The Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve: Human Needs and Natural Resource Conservation in the Ecuadorian Amazon
    • The Wildlands and Human Needs Program: Putting Rural Development to Work for Conservation
    • Building Institutions for Sustainable Development in Acre, Brazil
  • NEW DIRECTIONS IN RESEARCH AND ACTION
    • Amuesha Forest Use and Management: An Integration of Indigenous Use and Natural Forest Management
    • Incorporation of Game Animals into Small-Scale Agroforestry Systems in the Neotropics
    • Common Property Resources in the Neotropics: Theory, Management Progress, and an Action Agenda
    • Valuing Land Uses in Amazonia: Colonist Agriculture, Cattle, and Petty Extraction in Comparative Perspective
    • Buying in the Forests: A New Program to Market Sustainably Collected Tropical Forest Products Protects Forests and Forest Residents
    • Neotropical Moist Forests: Priorities for the Next Two Decades.

Caractéristiques

  • Date de parution
    02/02/2000
  • Editeur
  • Collection
    biological resource management
  • ISBN
    0-231-07603-7
  • EAN
    9780231076036
  • Présentation
    Broché
  • Nb. de pages
    475 pages
  • Poids
    0.665 Kg
  • Dimensions
    15,3 cm × 22,9 cm × 2,6 cm

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À propos des auteurs

KENT H. REDFORD is director of the international program for Biodiversity Analysis and Coordination at the Wildlife Conservation Society. He has done extensive field research in Brazil, Paraguay, and Bolivia and has published many scientific papers. CHRISTINE PADOCH is associate scientist, Institute of Economic Botany.

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