Safety nets, gap filling and forests: a global-comparative perspective

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In the forest-livelihoods literature, forests are widely perceived to provide both common safety nets to shocks and resources for seasonal gap-filling. We use a large global-comparative dataset to test these responses. We find households rank forest-extraction responses to shocks lower than most common alternatives. For seasonal gap-filling, forest extraction also has limited importance. The minority of households using forests for coping is asset-poor and lives in villages specialized on forests, in particular timber extraction. Overall, forest resources may be less important as a buffer between agricultural harvests and in times of unforeseen hardship than has been found in many case studies
Authors: Wunder, S.; Börner, J.; Shively, G.; Wyman, M.
Subjects: livelihoods, risk, income, diversification, household income
Publication type: ISI, Journal Article, Publication
Year: 2014
ISSN: 0305-750X

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