Contrasted land use and development trajectories in the Brazilian Amazon

The Amazon is the largest tropical forest area on Earth, and is undergoing rapid deforestation since the last four decades. These conversions are mostly located in frontier areas distributed along the so-called “arc of deforestation”. Within this large zone, various land use change processes are interacting through several modes of land valorization and organization. From two case studies in the state of Para (Brazil), the current paper aims at analyzing how these landscape dynamics in contrasted frontier areas are related to infrastructure development, ecological conditions, land tenure and fiscal policies, and to the evolution and the organization of the production, consumption and marketing chains of livestock products. The main objectives are to illustrate the spatial and temporal variability regarding incentives and disincentives to convert tropical forests for other agricultural uses and how do contrasted biophysical and socio-economic conditions (such as accessibility or land tenure) affect current and future land use and development trajectories, with a particular emphasis on the role of roads infrastructure. This study draws on complementary datasets, socio-economic census, key informants interviews and satellite remote sensing imagery, linked with geo-referenced information on human and biophysical conditions. These data were integrated in a GIS, and the analyses were supported quantitatively by using spatial econometric modelling approaches and landscape ecology tools.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mertens, B., Piketty, M.G., Venturieri, A., Alves, D., Tourrand, Jean François
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2004
Subjects:deforestation, land use, agricultural development, roads, geographical information systems, case studies, spatial analysis, econometric models,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18970
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/1530
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-189702023-02-15T01:16:36Z Contrasted land use and development trajectories in the Brazilian Amazon Mertens, B. Piketty, M.G. Venturieri, A. Alves, D. Tourrand, Jean François deforestation land use agricultural development roads geographical information systems case studies spatial analysis econometric models The Amazon is the largest tropical forest area on Earth, and is undergoing rapid deforestation since the last four decades. These conversions are mostly located in frontier areas distributed along the so-called “arc of deforestation”. Within this large zone, various land use change processes are interacting through several modes of land valorization and organization. From two case studies in the state of Para (Brazil), the current paper aims at analyzing how these landscape dynamics in contrasted frontier areas are related to infrastructure development, ecological conditions, land tenure and fiscal policies, and to the evolution and the organization of the production, consumption and marketing chains of livestock products. The main objectives are to illustrate the spatial and temporal variability regarding incentives and disincentives to convert tropical forests for other agricultural uses and how do contrasted biophysical and socio-economic conditions (such as accessibility or land tenure) affect current and future land use and development trajectories, with a particular emphasis on the role of roads infrastructure. This study draws on complementary datasets, socio-economic census, key informants interviews and satellite remote sensing imagery, linked with geo-referenced information on human and biophysical conditions. These data were integrated in a GIS, and the analyses were supported quantitatively by using spatial econometric modelling approaches and landscape ecology tools. 2004 2012-06-04T09:09:00Z 2012-06-04T09:09:00Z Journal Article Mertens, B., Piketty, M.G., Venturieri, A., Alves, D., Tourrand, J.F. 2004. Contrasted land use and development trajectories in the Brazilian Amazon . Bois et Forets des Tropiques 280 :17-27. ISSN: 0006-579X. 0006-579X https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18970 https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/1530 en Bois et Forêts des Tropiques
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic deforestation
land use
agricultural development
roads
geographical information systems
case studies
spatial analysis
econometric models
deforestation
land use
agricultural development
roads
geographical information systems
case studies
spatial analysis
econometric models
spellingShingle deforestation
land use
agricultural development
roads
geographical information systems
case studies
spatial analysis
econometric models
deforestation
land use
agricultural development
roads
geographical information systems
case studies
spatial analysis
econometric models
Mertens, B.
Piketty, M.G.
Venturieri, A.
Alves, D.
Tourrand, Jean François
Contrasted land use and development trajectories in the Brazilian Amazon
description The Amazon is the largest tropical forest area on Earth, and is undergoing rapid deforestation since the last four decades. These conversions are mostly located in frontier areas distributed along the so-called “arc of deforestation”. Within this large zone, various land use change processes are interacting through several modes of land valorization and organization. From two case studies in the state of Para (Brazil), the current paper aims at analyzing how these landscape dynamics in contrasted frontier areas are related to infrastructure development, ecological conditions, land tenure and fiscal policies, and to the evolution and the organization of the production, consumption and marketing chains of livestock products. The main objectives are to illustrate the spatial and temporal variability regarding incentives and disincentives to convert tropical forests for other agricultural uses and how do contrasted biophysical and socio-economic conditions (such as accessibility or land tenure) affect current and future land use and development trajectories, with a particular emphasis on the role of roads infrastructure. This study draws on complementary datasets, socio-economic census, key informants interviews and satellite remote sensing imagery, linked with geo-referenced information on human and biophysical conditions. These data were integrated in a GIS, and the analyses were supported quantitatively by using spatial econometric modelling approaches and landscape ecology tools.
format Journal Article
topic_facet deforestation
land use
agricultural development
roads
geographical information systems
case studies
spatial analysis
econometric models
author Mertens, B.
Piketty, M.G.
Venturieri, A.
Alves, D.
Tourrand, Jean François
author_facet Mertens, B.
Piketty, M.G.
Venturieri, A.
Alves, D.
Tourrand, Jean François
author_sort Mertens, B.
title Contrasted land use and development trajectories in the Brazilian Amazon
title_short Contrasted land use and development trajectories in the Brazilian Amazon
title_full Contrasted land use and development trajectories in the Brazilian Amazon
title_fullStr Contrasted land use and development trajectories in the Brazilian Amazon
title_full_unstemmed Contrasted land use and development trajectories in the Brazilian Amazon
title_sort contrasted land use and development trajectories in the brazilian amazon
publishDate 2004
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18970
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/1530
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