4.7 Article

Wealth and the distribution of benefits from tropical forests: Implications for REDD

Journal

LAND USE POLICY
Volume 72, Issue -, Pages 510-522

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.landusepol.2018.01.012

Keywords

Forests; Elite capture; REDD; Inequality; Conservation; Payments for ecosystem services

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [SES-0648447, DEB-1114984, BCS-0527165]
  2. MacArthur Foundation [858830]
  3. European Commission [DCI-ENV/2011/269520]
  4. Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation [QZA-10/0468, QZA-12/0882, QZA-16/0110]
  5. Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade [46167, 63560]
  6. International Climate Initiative of the German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building, and Nuclear Safety [KI II 7-422066/75]
  7. United Kingdom Department for International Development [DfID-UKTF069018]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Interventions to strengthen forest conservation in tropical biomes face multiple challenges. Insecure land tenure and unequal benefit sharing within forest user groups are two of the most important. Using original household level survey data from 130 villages in six countries, we assess how current wealth inequality relates to tenure security and benefit flows from forest use. We find that villages with higher wealth inequality report lower tenure security and more unequal flows from forest income and externally sourced income. Furthermore, we find that wealthier individuals within villages capture a disproportionately larger share of the total amount of forest benefits available to each village, while external income often benefits poorer individuals more. These findings suggest that unless future forest conservation interventions actively work to mitigate inequalities linked to existing forest benefit flows, there is a risk that these interventions-including those associated with REDD + activities reproduce or even aggravate pre-existing socioeconomic inequalities within user groups, potentially undermining both their conservation and economic objectives.

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