Human migration to the forest frontier: Implications for land use change and conservation management

IF 1.7 Q2 GEOGRAPHY
Julia P.G. Jones, Rina Mandimbiniaina, Ruth Kelly, Patrick Ranjatson, Bodonirina Rakotojoelina, Kate Schreckenberg, Mahesh Poudyal
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引用次数: 20

Abstract

Human migration is often considered an important driver of land use change and a threat to protected area integrity, but the reasons for in-migration, the effectiveness of conservation restrictions at stemming migration, and the extent to which migrants disproportionately contribute to land use change has been poorly studied, especially at fine spatial scales. Using a case study in eastern Madagascar (603 household surveys, mapping agricultural land for a subset of 167 households, and 49 focus group discussions and key informant interviews), we explore the patterns and drivers of migration within the lifetime of those currently alive. We investigate how this influences forest conversion on the border of established protected areas and sites without a history of conservation restrictions. We show that in-migration is driven, especially in sites with high migration, by access to land. There is a much higher proportion of migrant households at sites without a long history of conservation restrictions than around long-established protected areas, and migrants tend to be more educated and live closer to the forest edge than non-migrants. Our evidence supports the engulfment model (an active forest frontier later becoming a protected area); there is no evidence that protected areas have attracted migrants. Where there is a perceived open forest frontier, people move to the forest but these migrants are no more likely than local people to clear land (i.e., migrants are not “exceptional resource degraders”). In some parts of the tropics, out-migration from rural areas is resulting in forest regrowth; such a forest transition is unlikely to occur in Madagascar for some time. Those seeking to manage protected areas at the forest frontier will therefore need to prevent further colonisation; supporting tenure security for existing residents is likely to be an important step.

Abstract Image

人类向森林边界的迁移:对土地利用变化和保护管理的影响
人类迁移通常被认为是土地利用变化的重要驱动因素和对保护区完整性的威胁,但对迁移的原因、保护限制在阻止迁移方面的有效性以及移民对土地利用变化的不成比例贡献程度的研究很少,特别是在精细的空间尺度上。通过对马达加斯加东部的一个案例研究(603个家庭调查,167个家庭的农业用地测绘,49个焦点小组讨论和关键信息者访谈),我们探讨了目前活着的人一生中迁移的模式和驱动因素。我们调查了这如何影响已建立的保护区和没有保护限制历史的地点的边界上的森林转换。我们的研究表明,移民是由获得土地驱动的,特别是在高移民的地区。与长期建立的保护区相比,在没有长期保护限制的地区,移民家庭的比例要高得多。与非移民相比,移民往往受教育程度更高,住得更靠近森林边缘。我们的证据支持吞没模型(活跃的森林边界后来成为保护区);没有证据表明保护区吸引了移民。在人们认为有开放的森林边界的地方,人们迁移到森林,但这些移民并不比当地人更有可能清理土地(即,移民不是“特殊的资源退化者”)。在一些热带地区,农村人口向外迁移导致森林重新生长;这样的森林转变在一段时间内不太可能在马达加斯加发生。因此,那些寻求管理森林边界保护区的人将需要防止进一步的殖民化;支持现有居民的使用权保障可能是重要的一步。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
审稿时长
25 weeks
期刊介绍: Geo is a fully open access international journal publishing original articles from across the spectrum of geographical and environmental research. Geo welcomes submissions which make a significant contribution to one or more of the journal’s aims. These are to: • encompass the breadth of geographical, environmental and related research, based on original scholarship in the sciences, social sciences and humanities; • bring new understanding to and enhance communication between geographical research agendas, including human-environment interactions, global North-South relations and academic-policy exchange; • advance spatial research and address the importance of geographical enquiry to the understanding of, and action about, contemporary issues; • foster methodological development, including collaborative forms of knowledge production, interdisciplinary approaches and the innovative use of quantitative and/or qualitative data sets; • publish research articles, review papers, data and digital humanities papers, and commentaries which are of international significance.
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