The politics of deforestation in Africa : Madagascar, Tanzania, and Uganda

著者

    • Horning, Nadia Rabesahala

書誌事項

The politics of deforestation in Africa : Madagascar, Tanzania, and Uganda

Nadia Rabesahala Horning

Palgrave Macmillan, c2018

  • : softcover

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注記

"Softcover re-print of the Hardcover 1st edition 2018"--T.p. verso of softcover

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This book explores how environmental policies are made and enforced in Africa. Specifically, this project explains the gap between intent and impact of forest policies, focusing on three African societies facing persistent deforestation today: Madagascar, Tanzania, and Uganda. The central claim of the study is that deforestation persists because conservation policies and projects, which are largely underwritten by foreign donors, consistently ignore the fact that conservation is possible only under limited and specific conditions. To make the case, the author examines how decision-making power is negotiated and exercised where communities make environmental decisions daily (local level) and where environmental policies are negotiated and enacted (national level) across three distinct African political systems.

目次

1. Why Deforestation Persists in Africa: Actors, Interests, Institutions, and Interest Alignment 2. Seeing Like a Farmer: Resource Politics at the Community Level 3. Executive Branches and Trees: Environmental Politics at the National Level 4. Across the Great Divide: Collaborative Forest Management 5. Epilogue

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