Floods affect more than 21 million people yearly, principally in poor countries. Using 3-year panel microdata from Tanzania and satellite flood data, this paper investigates the impacts of two successive large floods on households' value of crop production, income, expenditures and life...
Author(s)
Djoumessi Tiague, B.
Publisher
Springer, Dordrecht, Netherlands
Citation
Environmental and Resource Economics, 2023, 85, 2, pp 341-384
The Lake (Victoria) zone of Tanzania, which has the least forest resources in the country, is a potential economic growth zone in the country. Therefore, this study analyses the impact of implemented forest policies on the status of forest resources in the area, given the unique features. The study ...
Author(s)
Mihayo, I. Z.; Peng DaiYan
Publisher
Institute of Forest Science, Kangwon National University, chunchon, Korea Republic
Citation
Journal of Forest and Environmental Science, 2020, 36, 3, pp 233-242
This paper offers a systematic approach to quantifying the socio-economic role of forests for 'forest-dependent' communities. Focusing on the island of Pemba (Zanzibar, Tanzania), we investigate how forest income contributes to livelihood portfolios, local inequality, and households' insurance...
Author(s)
Andrews, J.; Mulder, M. B.
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd, Oxford, UK
Citation
World Development (Oxford), 2022, 153,
Participatory forest management (PFM) has been applied to address declining tropical forest conditions. In the literature, there is a mixed evidence on PFM's role in improving forest conditions. However, most assessments ignore a relationship between household distance from PFM forests and impacts...
Author(s)
Mabele, M. B.; Kamnde, K.; Bwagalilo, F.; Kalumanga, E.
Publisher
Elsevier B.V., Amsterdam, Netherlands
Citation
Forest Policy and Economics, 2022, 143,
Sense of ownership is often advocated as an argument for local participation within the epistemic development and nature conservation communities. Stakeholder participation in initiating, designing or implementing institutions is claimed to establish a sense of ownership among the stakeholders and...
Author(s)
Handberg, Ø. N.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK
Citation
Environment and Development Economics, 2018, 23, 4, pp 434-451
It has been hypothesized that the effectiveness of payments for ecosystem services (PES) programs could, in some cases, be undermined by motivational crowding out, the detrimental interaction between new material incentives and payees' pre-existing intrinsic incentives. Of particular concern is the ...
Author(s)
Kaczan, D. J.; Swallow, B. M.; Adamowicz, W. L.
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd, Oxford, UK
Citation
Ecological Economics, 2019, 156, pp 444-453
While forests are a primary source of energy for the majority of Tanzanian households, the forest cover is rapidly declining. The Tanzanian government has introduced a tree-planting campaign strategy, aimed at reducing pressure on natural forests. However, the campaign appears not to have...
Author(s)
Kulindwa, Y. J.; Ahlgren, E. O.
Publisher
Elsevier B.V., Amsterdam, Netherlands
Citation
Forest Policy and Economics, 2021, 130,
How do different levels of individual payments for environmental services (PES) affect intrinsic and social motivations for forest conservation? Does introducing small PES crowd out these motivations? This paper presents findings from framed field experiments (FFE) conducted with local forest users ...
Author(s)
Handberg, Ø. N.; Angelsen, A.
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd, Oxford, UK
Citation
Ecological Economics, 2019, 156, pp 454-467
As large-scale forest plantations expand in developing countries, concerns are rising about their relation to and integration with adjacent local communities. In developing countries with weak enforcement of property rights, private plantations are more likely than state-owned plantations to...
Author(s)
Degnet, M. B.; Werf, E. van der; Ingram, V.; Wesseler, J. H. H.
Publisher
MDPI AG, Basel, Switzerland
Citation
Forests, 2020, 11, 7,
In the past decade, concern for forest loss has spurred ambitious restoration goals for climatic, ecological, and livelihood benefits. Restoration activities typically rely on government-led or large-scale tree planting. A narrow focus on top-down initiatives could promote the recentralization of...
Author(s)
Kimambo, N. E.; L'roe, J.; Naughton-Treves, L.; Radeloff, V. C.
Publisher
Elsevier B.V., Amsterdam, Netherlands
Citation
Forest Policy and Economics, 2020, 115,