Top-down natural resource management approaches have been criticized as failing to sustainably protect forest resources. Decentralization of this management has become increasingly popular but there is a lack of consensus on whether or not decentralization has produced more effective natural resource management. Guatemala adopted a partially decentralized approach to forest management in 1996. This research examines the effects of decentralization on Guatemalan forest resources using a unique integration of social, physiographic, and land-cover change data. Results indicate that deforestation and reforestation rates both increased post-decentralization in areas with higher population and road densities, with a net forest cover increase post-decentralization. The primary shift was from passive forest conservation and monitoring pre-decentralization to an active forest harvest and reforestation effort. The number of employees dedicated to forestry activities is the most significant social variable in reforestation efforts post-decentralization.
CITATION STYLE
Paulson Priebe, M. E., Evans, T., Andersson, K., & Castellanos, E. (2015). Decentralization, forest management, and forest conditions in Guatemala. Journal of Land Use Science, 10(4), 425–441. https://doi.org/10.1080/1747423X.2014.915350
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