Bernd-Arno Behrens; Alexander Brosius; Welf-Guntram Drossel; Wolfgang Hintze; Steffen Ihlenfeldt; Peter Nyhuis Springer Nature Switzerland AG (2021) Kovakantinen kirja
Bernd-Arno Behrens; Alexander Brosius; Wolfgang Hintze; Steffen Ihlenfeldt; Jens Peter Wulfsberg Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. KG (2021) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Bernd-Arno Behrens; Alexander Brosius; Wolfgang Hintze; Steffen Ihlenfeldt; Jens Peter Wulfsberg Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. KG (2020) Kovakantinen kirja
Bernd-Arno Behrens; Alexander Brosius; Welf-Guntram Drossel; Wolfgang Hintze; Steffen Ihlenfeldt; Peter Nyhuis Springer Nature Switzerland AG (2022) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Since 1980, some of the last extensive stands of tropical forest in the Phillipines have been destroyed, as part of a broader spate of deforestation in Southeast Asia—in Borneo, the Malay Peninsula, and Sumatra—largely at the hands of logging companies. Yet local discussions of deforestation often fault shifting cultivation as the source of the problem. Many Southeast Asian governments condemn shifting cultivation as a wasteful and destructive practice and the primary cause of deforestation. And sometimes even those with first-hand knowledge of these agricultural systems do not recognize the multiplicity of factors impinging on the sustainability of affected regions. There is clearly a need to assess and clarify the factors constituting environmental disturbance. After Duwagan offers a method for empirically assessing the effects of shifting agriculture practices. In the case of the Ayta—the main subject case of After Duwagan—the system of shifting agriculture has been quite destructive when combined with other types of disturbance. To see why this is so, it is important to view the agricultural system in comparative context, with attention to how different systems compare, how they are integrated with other types of disturbance in a particular setting, and how different types of disturbance, such as logging, compare to shifting agriculture. Through attention to these dimensions, After Duwagan provides a theoretically coherent way of looking both at the range of disturbances occuring in a single ecosystem and at the instances of a single type of disturbance across different ecosystems, including over time. Includes maps, figures, tables, and forty photographic plates.