Ecology and Society (Dec 2004)
Markets Drive the Specialization Strategies of Forest Peoples
- Manuel Ruiz-Pérez,
- Brian Belcher,
- Ramadhani Achdiawan,
- Miguel Alexiades,
- Catherine Aubertin,
- Javier Caballero,
- Bruce Campbell,
- Charles Clement,
- Tony Cunningham,
- Alfredo Fantini,
- Hubert de Foresta,
- Carmen García Fernández,
- Krishna H. Gautam,
- Paul Hersch Martínez,
- Wil de Jong,
- Koen Kusters,
- M. Govindan Kutty,
- Citlalli López,
- Maoyi Fu,
- Miguel Angel Martínez Alfaro,
- T.K. Raghavan Nair,
- Ousseynou Ndoye,
- Rafael Ocampo,
- Nitin Rai,
- Martin Ricker,
- Kate Schreckenberg,
- Sheona Shackleton,
- Patricia Shanley,
- Terry Sunderland,
- Yeo-Chang Youn
Affiliations
- Manuel Ruiz-Pérez
- Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
- Brian Belcher
- Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
- Ramadhani Achdiawan
- Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
- Miguel Alexiades
- University of Kent at Canterbury
- Catherine Aubertin
- IRD-Orléans
- Javier Caballero
- Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
- Bruce Campbell
- Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
- Charles Clement
- Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia
- Tony Cunningham
- World Wildlife Fund/UNESCO/Kew People and Plants Initiative
- Alfredo Fantini
- Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina
- Hubert de Foresta
- Institut de recherche pour le développement
- Carmen García Fernández
- Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
- Krishna H. Gautam
- Hokkaido University
- Paul Hersch Martínez
- Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia
- Wil de Jong
- Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
- Koen Kusters
- Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
- M. Govindan Kutty
- Sylva conS
- Citlalli López
- Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
- Maoyi Fu
- Chinese Academy of Forestry
- Miguel Angel Martínez Alfaro
- Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
- T.K. Raghavan Nair
- Sylva conS
- Ousseynou Ndoye
- CIFOR-Cameroon
- Rafael Ocampo
- Nitin Rai
- Martin Ricker
- Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
- Kate Schreckenberg
- Overseas Development Institute
- Sheona Shackleton
- Rhodes University
- Patricia Shanley
- Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
- Terry Sunderland
- African Rattan Research Programme
- Yeo-Chang Youn
- Seoul National University
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-00655-090204
- Journal volume & issue
-
Vol. 9,
no. 2
p. 4
Abstract
Engagement in the market changes the opportunities and strategies of forest-related peoples. Efforts to support rural development need to better understand the potential importance of markets and the way people respond to them. To this end, we compared 61 case studies of the commercial production and trade of nontimber forest products from Asia, Africa, and Latin America. The results show that product use is shaped by local markets and institutions, resource abundance, and the relative level of development. Larger regional patterns are also important. High-value products tend to be managed intensively by specialized producers and yield substantially higher incomes than those generated by the less specialized producers of less managed, low-value products. We conclude that commercial trade drives a process of intensified production and household specialization among forest peoples.
Keywords
- Commercialization
- forest use
- market development
- nontimber forest products
- poverty
- resource management
- specialization