Forest and Society: Initiating a Southeast Asia Journal for Theoretical, Empirical, and Regional Scholarship
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- 2017-04-27 (2)
- 2017-04-27 (1)
Welcome to our first edition. We are excited to provide a new, and what we believe, timely avenue for presenting research findings and publications in Southeast Asia, for scholars interested in Southeast Asia. Although Southeast Asia as a region of study has provided tremendous contributions to theory and practice regarding forests and society across the social and natural sciences, avenues for cultivating a scholarship of the region remain limited. We seek to engage on a broad set of themes through the application of targeted research related to timely issues affecting the human-environment interface in a diverse region that we have much to learn from. We take a broad understanding of the forest - as a politico-administrative unit, a geographic area, and as an ecological unit. We do not limit the forest to its boundaries but rather seek to engage on the dynamics of change in social and ecological processes. Under such an umbrella, new approaches and methods become possible. 'Forest' can be analyzed as land use, ecological process, divided across watersheds, as landscapes, mountains, and more. The lens of 'society' allows for opportunities to understand change, whether it is the interaction between a resource to be preserved, exploited, forgotten, or erased. Forests, therefore, operate as the clues of what once was, has become, and what can be. Particularly in the age of climate change, riddled by increasingly complex challenges, a new dimension also emerges for the forest. Different perspectives at different scales - from the local to the global - provide equally important dimensions, and are those which we seek to provide avenues to learn from, and communicate through this journal. As the reader will find in this inaugural issue, we have compiled an initial set of studies across multiple methods and geographies that help to set the terms of future editions. We examine: historical political ecologies of land use around opium cultivation in the uplands of Thailand; emerging governance regimes of corporate social responsibility in Myanmar; the capacity of new state institutions to manage land conflict in forest estate lands in Indonesia; a close analysis of forest harvesting and management in a mangrove forest in Malaysia; and, an economic valuation of non-timber forest products in a national park in Indonesia. There is much to choose from and much more to delve into. We hope that this issue serves as an impetus to engage on these timely themes and further encourages new ideas for submissions.
Affandi, O., Zaitunah, A., Batubara, R. (2017). Potential Economic and Development Prospects of Non Timber Forest Products in Community Agroforestry Land Around Sibolangit Tourism Park. Forest and Society (1)1:68-77.
Anderson, B. (2017). People, Land and Poppy: the Political Ecology of Opium and the Historical Impact of Alternative Development in Northwest Thailand. Forest and Society (1)1:48-59
Agrawal, A., & Ostrom, E. (2001). Collective action, property rights, and decentralization in resource use in India and Nepal. Politics & Society, 29(4), 485-514.
ASEAN Cooperation on Environment, 2015. Overview of ASEAN Cooperation on Environment. Retrieved from http://environment.asean.org/about-us-2/ at 26.04.2016
Boomgaard, P. (2007). Southeast Asia: An Environmental History. Abc-clio.
Dudley, N., Jeanrenaud, J. P., & Sullivan, F. (2014). Bad harvest: The timber trade and the degradation of global forests. Routledge.
Empawi, A., Gandaseca, S., Nyangon, L., Pazi, A.M.M. (2017). Productivity and Cost Analysis of Forest Harvesting Operation in Matang Mangrove Forest, Perak, Malaysia. Forest and Society (1)1:60-67.
Giessen L. 2013. Reviewing the Main Characteristics of the International Foret Regime Complex and Partial Explanation for its Fragmentation. International Forestry Review 15(1):60-70.
Fisher, L.A., Kim, Y.S., Latifah, S., Mukarom, M., (2017). Managing Forest Conflicts: Perspectives of Indonesia’s Forest Management Unit Directors. Forest and Society (1)1:8-26.
Hall, D., Hirsch, P., & Li, T. M. (2011). Powers of Exclusion: Land Dilemmas in Southeast Asia. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.
Kuhonta, E. M., Slater, D., & Vu, T. (Eds.). (2008). Southeast Asia in political science: theory, region, and qualitative analysis (Vol. 56). Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
Krasner S.D. (1982). Structural Causes and Regime Consequences: Regimes as Intervening Variables. International Organization 36(2): 185–205.
Maryudi, A., Devkota, R. R., Schusser, C., Yufanyi, C., Salla, M., Aurenhammer, H., ... & Krott, M. (2012). Back to basics: considerations in evaluating the outcomes of community forestry. Forest Policy and Economics, 14(1), 1-5.
Peluso, N. L., Vandergeest, P., & Potter, L. (1995). Social aspects of forestry in Southeast Asia: a review of postwar trends in the scholarly literature. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 26(01), 196-218.
Poffenberger, M. (2006). People in the forest: community forestry experiences from Southeast Asia. International Journal of Environment and Sustainable Development, 5(1), 57-69.
Rakhmani, I., & Siregar, F. (2016). Reforming Research in Indonesia: policies and practice (No. 92). GDN Working Paper.
Rayner, J., Humphreys, D., Perron Welch, Frederic, Prabhu, Ravi, Verkooijen, P., 2010. Introduction. In: Rayner, J., Buck, A., Katila, P. (Eds.), Embracing Complexity: Meeting the Challenges of International Forest Governance.vol.28. IUFRO World Series,Vienna, pp. 9? 18
RECOFTC (2014). Current status of social forestry in climate change mitigation and adaptation in the ASEAN region: Situational analysis 2013. Bangkok, RECOFTC ? The Center for People and Forests
Sahide, M. A. K., Nurrochmat, D. R., & Giessen, L. (2015). The regime complex for tropical rainforest transformation: Analysing the relevance of multiple global and regional land use regimes in Indonesia. Land Use Policy, 47, 408-425.
Scott, J. C. (2009). The Art of Not Being Governed: An Anarchist History of Upland Southeast Asia. Yale University Press.
Singer, B., & Giessen, L. (2017). Towards a donut regime? Domestic actors, climatization, and the hollowing-out of the international forests regime in the Anthropocene. Forest Policy and Economics.
Strasser., H. (2017). Corporate Spheres of Responsibility: Architects, Cowboys, and Eco-Warriors in Myanmar?s Oil & Gas Industry. Forest and Society (1)1:27-47.
Tsing, A. L. (2011). Friction: An ethnography of global connection. Princeton University Press.
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