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Book Review. Tropical forests: Regional Paths of Destruction and Regeneration in the Late 20th century

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Most deforestation studies either feature micro-level cases or global-comparative cross-country regressions. The first run serious dangers of overly site-specific reasoning, the second of universal over-generalisation. Tom Rudel's book takes a refreshing and innovative middle-of-the-road approach. It collects findings from 270 national or sub-national land-use change studies published prior to 2003, and synthesizes them into a meso-level analysis, revealing common trends and causalities for seven sub-continental tropical regions. Integrating previous results from 1996, Rudel is also able to identify changes in regional de- and reforestation drivers between the 1970/80s and the 1990s. Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) empowered by Boolean algebra is his principal analytical tool, but he resists temptations of mechanical explanations: verbally weaving the multiple patchy cases into a picture coherent in space and time is at least as important as an achievement of this book.

DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2006.08.01029
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    Publication year

    2007

    Authors

    Wunder, S.

    Language

    English

    Keywords

    tropical forests, forest management, local government

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