Drug trafficking organizations are driving deforestation in Guatemala’s Maya Biosphere Reserve. Drug traffickers deforest the protected area in order to illegally ranch cattle, which serves as a mechanism of money laundering, drug smuggling, and territory control. Journalists and ethnographers have analyzed “narco-cattle ranching” activities in the reserve and resulting “narco-deforestation,” yet land use change scientists have yet to quantify the contribution of illegal cattle ranching to forest loss. This article uses remote sensing and GIS analysis to distinguish the relative contribution of cattle ranching, farming, and land speculation to reserve deforestation and other forms of land use and land cover change. We also use ethnographic ...
abstract: Anthropogenic land use has irrevocably transformed the natural systems on which humankind ...
Mexico currently occupies the fifth place in deforestation worldwide . Within this trade 60,000 hect...
Abstract. This paper examines potential differences in land use between Q’eqchí Maya and Ladino (Spa...
On frontiers dominated by illicit activities such as narcotrafficking, criminal organizations’ usurp...
Characteristic of the Anthropocene, human impacts have resulted in worldwide losses in forested land...
Chihuahua is Mexico’s biggest state, and more than a fifth of its 25,000 hectares is forested, mostl...
Fig. 1 Guatemalan Special Forces soldiers try to cross a river during an anti-drugs operation in the...
In recent years trans-boundary incursions from Petén, Guatemala into Belize’s Maya Mountain Massif (...
The Maya Biosphere Reserve (MBR) is the largest and most important conservation area in Guatemala, c...
Lack of legitimacy of land tenure institutions in the tropical Peten, Guatemala, contributes to the ...
The forests of the Sierra Madre Occidental are being assaulted on several fronts. The Mexican govern...
ABSTRACT: Narco-trafficking and Perpetuated Violence in Guatemala Over the years drug cartels have m...
Agricultural frontiers are hot spots for the most dramatic land cover change in the history of human...
Remote sensing technologies, such as satellite imagery, along with geographic information systems (G...
Guatemala was among the world’s leaders in deforestation during the 1990s at a rate of 2% per annum....
abstract: Anthropogenic land use has irrevocably transformed the natural systems on which humankind ...
Mexico currently occupies the fifth place in deforestation worldwide . Within this trade 60,000 hect...
Abstract. This paper examines potential differences in land use between Q’eqchí Maya and Ladino (Spa...
On frontiers dominated by illicit activities such as narcotrafficking, criminal organizations’ usurp...
Characteristic of the Anthropocene, human impacts have resulted in worldwide losses in forested land...
Chihuahua is Mexico’s biggest state, and more than a fifth of its 25,000 hectares is forested, mostl...
Fig. 1 Guatemalan Special Forces soldiers try to cross a river during an anti-drugs operation in the...
In recent years trans-boundary incursions from Petén, Guatemala into Belize’s Maya Mountain Massif (...
The Maya Biosphere Reserve (MBR) is the largest and most important conservation area in Guatemala, c...
Lack of legitimacy of land tenure institutions in the tropical Peten, Guatemala, contributes to the ...
The forests of the Sierra Madre Occidental are being assaulted on several fronts. The Mexican govern...
ABSTRACT: Narco-trafficking and Perpetuated Violence in Guatemala Over the years drug cartels have m...
Agricultural frontiers are hot spots for the most dramatic land cover change in the history of human...
Remote sensing technologies, such as satellite imagery, along with geographic information systems (G...
Guatemala was among the world’s leaders in deforestation during the 1990s at a rate of 2% per annum....
abstract: Anthropogenic land use has irrevocably transformed the natural systems on which humankind ...
Mexico currently occupies the fifth place in deforestation worldwide . Within this trade 60,000 hect...
Abstract. This paper examines potential differences in land use between Q’eqchí Maya and Ladino (Spa...