This paper outlines the major factors contributing to deforestation in the Sierra Chatina of Oaxaca, Mexico and examines the role played by neo-liberal restructuring in these processes. The last 25 years of rural development in the Sierra Chatino has been accompanied by increasingly large-scale environmental changes. The most obvious outcome has been the loss of 40 percent of the areas natural vegetation. Deforestation has accelerated and exacerbated flooding and climate changes in the region as witnessed by the effects of El Niño driven storms such as Hurricane Pauline. This paper will focus on these processes of deforestation in the region. In this paper, we argue that the Mexican government’s neo-liberal policies have encouraged the comm...
Despite regional deforestation threats, the state of Quintana Roo has maintained over 80% of its ter...
Land use change results from top-down drivers, such as policies, trade, and migration. Land use chan...
The Mexican national Payment for Ecosystem Services (PES) programs pay rural landholders for hydrolo...
The Sierra Chatina (see Figure 1) is inhabited by some of the poorest indigenous communities in Mexi...
Despite increasingly more comprehensive policies for forest management, the last forty years in Mexi...
The protection of ecosystems is one of the most effective strategies to address multiple environment...
This research analyzes the relationship between the environmental and social elements in Mexico’s Pa...
A lingering question in economic geography is the degree to which there is a link between neoliberal...
This paper examines the political economy and policy environment of forestry production in northern ...
Social, political, economic, and environmental factors converge in developing countries to stimulate...
This dissertation explores contradictions of development within market-based carbon forestry project...
This dissertation examines how community-based forestry in Indigenous and campesino territories in S...
In the late 1980s and through the mid-1990s, Mexico underwent an enormous neoliberal transformation ...
Government based Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) have been criticized for not maximizing envir...
This paper examines how NAFTA has influenced the forestry and forest product industries in the north...
Despite regional deforestation threats, the state of Quintana Roo has maintained over 80% of its ter...
Land use change results from top-down drivers, such as policies, trade, and migration. Land use chan...
The Mexican national Payment for Ecosystem Services (PES) programs pay rural landholders for hydrolo...
The Sierra Chatina (see Figure 1) is inhabited by some of the poorest indigenous communities in Mexi...
Despite increasingly more comprehensive policies for forest management, the last forty years in Mexi...
The protection of ecosystems is one of the most effective strategies to address multiple environment...
This research analyzes the relationship between the environmental and social elements in Mexico’s Pa...
A lingering question in economic geography is the degree to which there is a link between neoliberal...
This paper examines the political economy and policy environment of forestry production in northern ...
Social, political, economic, and environmental factors converge in developing countries to stimulate...
This dissertation explores contradictions of development within market-based carbon forestry project...
This dissertation examines how community-based forestry in Indigenous and campesino territories in S...
In the late 1980s and through the mid-1990s, Mexico underwent an enormous neoliberal transformation ...
Government based Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) have been criticized for not maximizing envir...
This paper examines how NAFTA has influenced the forestry and forest product industries in the north...
Despite regional deforestation threats, the state of Quintana Roo has maintained over 80% of its ter...
Land use change results from top-down drivers, such as policies, trade, and migration. Land use chan...
The Mexican national Payment for Ecosystem Services (PES) programs pay rural landholders for hydrolo...