Agricultural intensification by smallholders in the western Brazilian Amazon : from deforestation to sustainable land use / Stephen A. Vosti, Julie Witcover, and Chantal Line Carpentier.

Despite the importance of tropical moist forests for conserving biodiversity and storing carbon, forests continue to fall, because the private benefits of clearing land for agriculture far outweigh tangible economic gains from retaining forests. This report measures the financial disparity between f...

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Bibliographic Details
Uniform Title:Research report (International Food Policy Research Institute) ; 130.
Main Author: Vosti, Stephen A.
Other Authors: Witcover, Julie
Carpentier, Chantal Line
Language:English
Published: Washington, D.C. : International Food Policy Research Institute, [2002], ©2002.
Series:Research report (International Food Policy Research Institute) ; 130.
Subjects:
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 electronic text (xiii, 135 pages) : PDF, illustrations map.
Also issued in print.
Format: Electronic eBook
Description
Summary:
Despite the importance of tropical moist forests for conserving biodiversity and storing carbon, forests continue to fall, because the private benefits of clearing land for agriculture far outweigh tangible economic gains from retaining forests. This report measures the financial disparity between forested and cleared land for small-scale farmers in two settlements in the western Brazilian Amazon where pastures are expanding and forests receding. Considering smallholder land use decisions--when and how much to deforest and for what purpose--the report weighs the trade-offs and complementarities among three development objectives: economic growth through agriculture, environmental sustainability, and poverty alleviation. Drawing on field data collected in the mid-1990s, it uses multivariate analysis to explore how factors such as soil quality and market access shape deforestation and use of cleared land. It introduces a farm-level bioeconomic linear programming model to illuminate how such factors influence land use over time, taking into account soil fertility shifts and exploring policy and technology options that give farmers incentives to slow deforestation without decreasing farm household income.
Note:Title from PDF cover (viewed on Oct. 4, 2006).
Publication from: International Food Policy Research Institute website.
Electronic resource.
Call Number:HD499.A44 V68 2002 Online
Bibliography Note:Includes bibliographical references (pages 127-135).
ISBN:0896291324 (alk. paper)
System Details:Mode of access: World Wide Web.
System requirements: Adobe Reader.
Additional Physical Form:
Also issued in print.