4.6 Article

Forest-linked livelihoods in a globalized world

Journal

NATURE PLANTS
Volume 6, Issue 12, Pages 1400-1407

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41477-020-00814-9

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Funding

  1. UK's Department for International Development [203516-102]
  2. University of Michigan's Institutional Review Board [HUM00092191]
  3. European Union FP7 Marie Curie international outgoing fellowship (FORCONEPAL)
  4. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme [853222 FORESTDIET]
  5. Australian Research Council Australia Laureate Fellowship [FL160100072]
  6. European Union Marie Curie global fellowship (CONRICONF)
  7. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program [677140]
  8. CGIAR Research Programme on Forests, Trees and Agroforestry
  9. NERC [NE/R017522/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The landscape of forest and human activity is ever shifting, but new large-scale trends are causing exceptional changes and potential space for new conservation and development for communities dependent on forests. Forests have re-taken centre stage in global conversations about sustainability, climate and biodiversity. Here, we use a horizon scanning approach to identify five large-scale trends that are likely to have substantial medium- and long-term effects on forests and forest livelihoods: forest megadisturbances; changing rural demographics; the rise of the middle-class in low- and middle-income countries; increased availability, access and use of digital technologies; and large-scale infrastructure development. These trends represent human and environmental processes that are exceptionally large in geographical extent and magnitude, and difficult to reverse. They are creating new agricultural and urban frontiers, changing existing rural landscapes and practices, opening spaces for novel conservation priorities and facilitating an unprecedented development of monitoring and evaluation platforms that can be used by local communities, civil society organizations, governments and international donors. Understanding these larger-scale dynamics is key to support not only the critical role of forests in meeting livelihood aspirations locally, but also a range of other sustainability challenges more globally. We argue that a better understanding of these trends and the identification of levers for change requires that the research community not only continue to build on case studies that have dominated research efforts so far, but place a greater emphasis on causality and causal mechanisms, and generate a deeper understanding of how local, national and international geographical scales interact.

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