The cross border timber trade in Kalimantan: will stopping timber smugglers help solve the illegal logging problem in Indonesia?

Indonesian forestry officials, timber industry associations, NGOs and research institutions are of the opinion that timber smuggling is a key contributor to the illegal logging problem in Indonesia. It is often stated that international crime syndicates, run mainly from the neighboring countries (i.e. Malaysia), are responsible for timber smuggling activities. Other assumptions are that if Malaysia and Indonesia cooperated, smuggling could be eliminated, and if timber smuggling was stopped, the illegal logging problem in Indonesia would be under control. These are sweeping assumptions that so far have not been systematically analyzed. This study was aimed to look more comprehensively at the dynamics, extent, nature and modus operandi of timber smuggling between Indonesia and Malaysia in Kalimantan and to assess the claims that are being made about the significance of timber smuggling within the context of the illegal logging problem in Indonesia. The results of this study will be used to inform the on-going debates on this issue and contribute to possible corrective measures.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Obidzinski, K., Andrianto, A., Wijaya, C., Hernawan, D., Belle, C.W.
Format: Brief biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Center for International Forestry Research 2006
Subjects:illicit felling, logging, forest products industry, forest products, forests, government,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19416
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/1997
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-194162023-02-15T01:15:39Z The cross border timber trade in Kalimantan: will stopping timber smugglers help solve the illegal logging problem in Indonesia? Obidzinski, K. Andrianto, A. Wijaya, C. Hernawan, D. Belle, C.W. illicit felling logging forest products industry forest products forests government Indonesian forestry officials, timber industry associations, NGOs and research institutions are of the opinion that timber smuggling is a key contributor to the illegal logging problem in Indonesia. It is often stated that international crime syndicates, run mainly from the neighboring countries (i.e. Malaysia), are responsible for timber smuggling activities. Other assumptions are that if Malaysia and Indonesia cooperated, smuggling could be eliminated, and if timber smuggling was stopped, the illegal logging problem in Indonesia would be under control. These are sweeping assumptions that so far have not been systematically analyzed. This study was aimed to look more comprehensively at the dynamics, extent, nature and modus operandi of timber smuggling between Indonesia and Malaysia in Kalimantan and to assess the claims that are being made about the significance of timber smuggling within the context of the illegal logging problem in Indonesia. The results of this study will be used to inform the on-going debates on this issue and contribute to possible corrective measures. 2006 2012-06-04T09:09:26Z 2012-06-04T09:09:26Z Brief Obidzinski, K., Andrianto, A., Wijaya, C., Hernawan, D., Belle, C.W. 2006. The cross border timber trade in Kalimantan: will stopping timber smugglers help solve the illegal logging problem in Indonesia? . CIFOR Governance Brief No.27. Bogor, Indonesia, CIFOR. 4p. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19416 https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/1997 en Center for International Forestry Research
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 illicit felling
logging
forest products industry
forest products
forests
government
illicit felling
logging
forest products industry
forest products
forests
government
spellingShingle illicit felling
logging
forest products industry
forest products
forests
government
illicit felling
logging
forest products industry
forest products
forests
government
Obidzinski, K.
Andrianto, A.
Wijaya, C.
Hernawan, D.
Belle, C.W.
The cross border timber trade in Kalimantan: will stopping timber smugglers help solve the illegal logging problem in Indonesia?
description Indonesian forestry officials, timber industry associations, NGOs and research institutions are of the opinion that timber smuggling is a key contributor to the illegal logging problem in Indonesia. It is often stated that international crime syndicates, run mainly from the neighboring countries (i.e. Malaysia), are responsible for timber smuggling activities. Other assumptions are that if Malaysia and Indonesia cooperated, smuggling could be eliminated, and if timber smuggling was stopped, the illegal logging problem in Indonesia would be under control. These are sweeping assumptions that so far have not been systematically analyzed. This study was aimed to look more comprehensively at the dynamics, extent, nature and modus operandi of timber smuggling between Indonesia and Malaysia in Kalimantan and to assess the claims that are being made about the significance of timber smuggling within the context of the illegal logging problem in Indonesia. The results of this study will be used to inform the on-going debates on this issue and contribute to possible corrective measures.
format Brief
topic_facet illicit felling
logging
forest products industry
forest products
forests
government
author Obidzinski, K.
Andrianto, A.
Wijaya, C.
Hernawan, D.
Belle, C.W.
author_facet Obidzinski, K.
Andrianto, A.
Wijaya, C.
Hernawan, D.
Belle, C.W.
author_sort Obidzinski, K.
title The cross border timber trade in Kalimantan: will stopping timber smugglers help solve the illegal logging problem in Indonesia?
title_short The cross border timber trade in Kalimantan: will stopping timber smugglers help solve the illegal logging problem in Indonesia?
title_full The cross border timber trade in Kalimantan: will stopping timber smugglers help solve the illegal logging problem in Indonesia?
title_fullStr The cross border timber trade in Kalimantan: will stopping timber smugglers help solve the illegal logging problem in Indonesia?
title_full_unstemmed The cross border timber trade in Kalimantan: will stopping timber smugglers help solve the illegal logging problem in Indonesia?
title_sort cross border timber trade in kalimantan: will stopping timber smugglers help solve the illegal logging problem in indonesia?
publisher Center for International Forestry Research
publishDate 2006
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19416
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/1997
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