Product Information
Amidst the pressing challenges of global climate change, the last decade has seen a wave of forest carbon projects across the world, designed to conserve and enhance forest carbon stocks in order to reduce carbon emissions from deforestation and offset emissions elsewhere. Exploring a set of new empirical case studies, Carbon Conflicts and Forest Landscapes in Africa examines how these projects are unfolding, their effects, and who is gaining and losing. Situating forest carbon approaches as part of more general moves to address environmental problems by attaching market values to nature and ecosystems, it examines how new projects interact with forest landscapes and their longer histories of intervention. The book asks: what difference does carbon make? What political and ecological dynamics are unleashed by these new commodified, marketized approaches, and how are local forest users experiencing and responding to them? The book's case studies cover a wide range of African ecologies, project types and national political-economic contexts. By examining these cases in a comparative framework and within an understanding of the national, regional and global institutional arrangements shaping forest carbon commoditisation, the book provides a rich and compelling account of how and why carbon conflicts are emerging, and how they might be avoided in future. This book will be of interest to students of development studies, environmental sciences, geography, economics, development studies and anthropology, as well as practitioners and policy makers.Product Identifiers
PublisherTaylor & Francis LTD
ISBN-139781138824829
eBay Product ID (ePID)212695991
Product Key Features
Number of Pages230 Pages
Publication NameCarbon Conflicts and Forest Landscapes in Africa
LanguageEnglish
SubjectGeography & Geosciences, Sustainability, Management
Publication Year2015
TypeTextbook
AuthorIan Scoones, Melissa Leach
SeriesPathways to Sustainability
Dimensions
Item Height234 mm
Item Weight522 g
Additional Product Features
EditorIan Scoones, Melissa Leach
Country/Region of ManufactureUnited Kingdom