This paper shows how the implementation of Vietnam's recent biodiversity conservation policy in Ba Vi National Park has increased the economic value of nature, created sustained conflict, and exacerbated agrarian differentiation in an upland village in northern Vietnam. Increased global and national interest in biodiversity conservation has intersected with markets for ecosystem services that attempt to commoditise biodiversity resources in Ba Vi National Park and reconfigure conservation as market-based development. Efforts to marketise conservation have simultaneously increased the financial value of forestland and drawn new capital investments. In Ba Vi, local elites have captured these new forms of wealth through their connections to po...
Governments in tropical countries are still responding to increasing forest degradation by implement...
Global conservation discourses and practices increasingly rely on market-based solutions to fulfill ...
Creation of protected areas for biological conservation often conflicts with sustenance of livelihoo...
This paper shows how the implementation of Vietnam«SQ»s recent biodiversity conservation policy in B...
Decisions on land use in Vietnam are often only based on biophysical and economical assessments, wit...
Decisions on land use in Vietnam are often only based on biophysical and economical assessments, wit...
Interest in the role that local people's knowledge and experiences can play in natural resource con...
Governments in tropical countries are still responding to increasing forest degradation by implement...
This paper examines the process of implementing land privatization and its effects on household live...
In 1995, the forest coverage area in Vietnam was 27.2%, but by 2019, it reached to 41.89%. The Gover...
Protected areas, in the modem sense, have been established worldwide over the last 140 years. They h...
Vietnam's 1993 land law gave land-use rights to individuals to improve forest management by allowin...
A major challenge in decentralized forest governance in Vietnam is developing a mechanism that woul...
We test an emerging theory of the forest transition using the case of Vietnam. In the early 1990s, d...
Global conservation discourses and practices increasingly rely on market-based solutions to fulfill ...
Governments in tropical countries are still responding to increasing forest degradation by implement...
Global conservation discourses and practices increasingly rely on market-based solutions to fulfill ...
Creation of protected areas for biological conservation often conflicts with sustenance of livelihoo...
This paper shows how the implementation of Vietnam«SQ»s recent biodiversity conservation policy in B...
Decisions on land use in Vietnam are often only based on biophysical and economical assessments, wit...
Decisions on land use in Vietnam are often only based on biophysical and economical assessments, wit...
Interest in the role that local people's knowledge and experiences can play in natural resource con...
Governments in tropical countries are still responding to increasing forest degradation by implement...
This paper examines the process of implementing land privatization and its effects on household live...
In 1995, the forest coverage area in Vietnam was 27.2%, but by 2019, it reached to 41.89%. The Gover...
Protected areas, in the modem sense, have been established worldwide over the last 140 years. They h...
Vietnam's 1993 land law gave land-use rights to individuals to improve forest management by allowin...
A major challenge in decentralized forest governance in Vietnam is developing a mechanism that woul...
We test an emerging theory of the forest transition using the case of Vietnam. In the early 1990s, d...
Global conservation discourses and practices increasingly rely on market-based solutions to fulfill ...
Governments in tropical countries are still responding to increasing forest degradation by implement...
Global conservation discourses and practices increasingly rely on market-based solutions to fulfill ...
Creation of protected areas for biological conservation often conflicts with sustenance of livelihoo...