Authors
Nathalie Van Vliet, Ole Mertz, Torben Birch-Thomsen, Birgit Schmook
Publication date
2013/2
Journal
Human Ecology
Volume
41
Pages
1-5
Publisher
Springer US
Description
Large areas of the tropical forest landscapes are still occupied–partly or fully–by swidden cultivation, but it is also clear that in many areas both the extent and intensity of swidden cultivation are changing. This is not new as it has always been a dynamic system used when it is opportune and changed or even dropped when other more favorable options for land and labor use, income, etc. appear. It seems that these changes now occur faster in some regions and slower or not at all in others (van Vliet et al. 2012). Political and economic pressures are the main drivers that have encouraged or enforced such changes, particularly towards more intensive agricultural practices or to other types of land use (urbanization, large scale plantations, protected areas, extractive concessions, etc.). However, the nature of these changes in swidden cultivation are not well documented, partly because swidden fields and the various …
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