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Results for “"Jeffrey Sayer"”

8 results

Plantation forests and biodiversity: oxymoron or opportunity?

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Eckehard G. Brockerhoff, Hervé Jactel, John A. Parrotta, Christopher P. Quine et al.

Journal: Biodiversity and ConservationYear: 2008Citations: 1207

Losses of natural and semi-natural forests, mostly to agriculture, are a significant concern for biodiversity. Against this trend, the area of intensively managed plantation forests increases, and there is much debate about the implications for biodiversity. We provide a comprehensive review of the ...

Physical SciencesEnvironmental ScienceGlobal and Planetary Change
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Improved Tropical Forest Management for Carbon Retention

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Francis E. Putz, Pieter A. Zuidema, Michelle A. Pinard, René Boot et al.

Journal: PLoS BiologyYear: 2008Citations: 248

Using reduced-impact timber-harvesting practices in legally logged tropical forests would reduce global carbon emissions by 0.16 Gt/year at a modest cost and with little risk of "leakage" (increased carbon emissions elsewhere).

Physical SciencesEnvironmental ScienceGlobal and Planetary ChangeOpen Access
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Mediating Forest Transitions: ′Grand Design′ or ′Muddling Through′

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Jeffrey Sayer, Gary Bullb, Chris Elliottc

Journal: Conservation and SocietyYear: 2008Citations: 89

"Present biodiversity conservation programmes in the remaining extensive forest blocks of the humid trop??ics are failing to achieve outcomes that will be viable in the medium to long term. Too much emphasis is given to what we term 'grand design'-ambitious and idealistic plans for conservation. Suc...

Physical SciencesEnvironmental ScienceGlobal and Planetary ChangeOpen Access
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When Donors Get Cold Feet: the Community Conservation Concession in Setulang (Kalimantan, Indonesia) that Never Happened

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Sven Wunder, Bruce Campbell, P. G. H. Frost, Jeffrey Sayer et al.

Journal: Ecology and SocietyYear: 2008Citations: 85

Wunder, S., B. Campbell, P. G. H. Frost, J. A. Sayer, R. Iwan, and L. Wollenberg. 2008. When donors get cold feet: the community conservation concession in Setulang (Kalimantan, Indonesia) that never happened. Ecology and Society 13(1): 12. https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-02376-130112

Physical SciencesEnvironmental ScienceGlobal and Planetary ChangeOpen Access
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Logging or conservation concession: Exploring conservation and development outcomes in Dzanga-Sangha, Central African Republic

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Marieke Sandker, BrunoBokoto-de Semboli, Philipp Roth, Cyril Péllisier et al.

Journal: Conservation and SocietyYear: 2011Citations: 9

The Dzanga-Sangha landscape consists of a national park surrounded by production forest. It is subject to an integrated conservation and development project (ICDP). In collaboration with the ICDP personnel, a participatory model was constructed to explore wildlife conservation and industrial logging...

Physical SciencesEnvironmental ScienceGlobal and Planetary ChangeOpen Access
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Indigenous livelihoods and the global environment: understanding relationships

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Neil Collier, Agni Klintuni Boedhihartono, Jeffrey Sayer

Journal: Victoria University Research Repository (Victoria University)Year: 2009Citations: 4

\n \t\t\tSimple simulation models have been built in remote locations with participation of local Indigenous peoples and their representatives to develop a shared understanding of the livelihood implications of conservation initiatives and the potential environmental impacts of measures to improve l...

Physical SciencesEnvironmental ScienceGlobal and Planetary ChangeOpen Access
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Bangladesh

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N. Mark Collins, Jeffrey Sayer, T. C. Whitmore

Journal: Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooksYear: 1991

Bangladesh, once forested with mangroves, rain forests and monsoon forests from the delta up into the hills, is now almost completely deforested. Less than five per cent of the original cover remains. Patches of rain forest only survive in the Chittagong Region in the south-east, where four hill ran...

Social SciencesPolitical Science and International RelationsBangladesh Politics, Society, and Development
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The Ecology of SulawesiA. J. Whitten, Mustafa Muslimin and G. S. Henderson Gadjah Mada University Press, Yogyakarta, 1987, 777 pp Copies are currently available from Heffer's Bookshop, Cambridge, at a cost of approximately £18.00.

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Jeffrey Sayer

Journal: OryxYear: 1987

The Ecology of SulawesiA. J. Whitten, Mustafa Muslimin and G. S. Henderson Gadjah Mada University Press, Yogyakarta, 1987, 777 pp Copies are currently available from Heffer's Bookshop, Cambridge, at a cost of approximately £18.00. - Volume 21 Issue 4

Life SciencesAgricultural and Biological SciencesForestryOpen Access
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