Productive Diversification and Sustainable Use of Complex Social-Ecological Systems: A Comparative Study of Indigenous and Settler Communities in the Bolivian Amazon
Abstract
Agricultural and forest productive diversification depends on multiple socioeconomic drivers—like knowledge, migration, productive capacity, and market—that shape productive strategies and influence their ecological impacts. Our comparison of indigenous and settlers allows a better understanding of how societies develop different diversification strategies in similar ecological contexts and how the related socioeconomic aspects of diversification are associated with land cover change. Our results suggest that although indigenous people cause less deforestation and diversify more, diversification is not a direct driver of deforestation reduction. A multidimensional approach linking sociocognitive, economic, and ecological patterns of diversification helps explain this contradiction. Show more
Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Agroecology and Sustainable Food SystemsVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Taylor & FrancisSubject
Productive diversification; Biocultural diversity; Indigenous knowledge; Deforestation; Bolivian AmazonOrganisational unit
09748 - Jacobi, Johanna / Jacobi, Johanna
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