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Overview
This volume addresses the acute challenges of sustainable forestry with emphasis on the developing countries. Sustainability is analyzed from its diametrically opposite deforestation point of view. A multilevel approach is adopted to take into account that the causes of deforestation occur at the local, national and international levels. Accordingly, the volume contains contributions at global, continental, national, and subnational levels.
The contributions are also of a multidisciplinary character and represent issues such as forest economics and policy, forest mensurations and inventory, tropical silviculture, land use economics, environmental economics and history, as well as geography and political history.
One of the aims of this volume is to present a collective analysis of deforestation and sustainability using the most up-to-date, reliable and valid empirical data. The authors have been among the first scientists in the world to have had access to the new FORIS database recently established by the FAO.
Audience: Foresters, environmentalists, conservationists, development workers, policy makers, researchers, students and teachers.
Synopsis
This volume addresses the acute challenges of sustainable forestry with emphasis on the developing countries. Sustainability is analyzed from its diametrically opposite deforestation point of view. A multilevel approach is adopted to take into account that the causes of deforestation occur at the local, national and international levels. Accordingly, the volume contains contributions at global, continental, national, and subnational levels.
The contributions are also of a multidisciplinary character and represent issues such as forest economics and policy, forest mensurations and inventory, tropical silviculture, land use economics, environmental economics and history, as well as geography and political history.
One of the aims of this volume is to present a collective analysis of deforestation and sustainability using the most up-to-date, reliable and valid empirical data. The authors have been among the first scientists in the world to have had access to the new FORIS database recently established by the FAO.
Audience: Foresters, environmentalists, conservationists, development workers, policy makers, researchers, students and teachers.
Booknews
Developed from a research project begun in 1987 by the Finnish Forest Research Institute to generate new knowledge about the causes of deforestation, its scenarios, and consequences. Focuses on 90 tropical countries taken as one group and three subgroups by continents; presents case studies of the Philippines, Ethiopia, and Chile; and includes analysis of Brazil and Indonesia as the two largest tropical- forest owning countries. Across the global, continental, national, and subnational scales, addresses such issues as economics and policy, mensurations and inventory, tropical silviculture, land use environmental economics, history, geography, and political science. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.