Governing Infrastructure

Full Title

Predictive modeling of the relationships among infrastructure, resource extraction, and environmental governance in Latin American forests

Abstract

The loss of tropical forest plays a significant role in climate change, biodiversity loss and livelihood disruption. Large-scale infrastructure, often linked to extractive industries and agro-industrial expansion, may catalyze forest conversion in sensitive socio-ecological zones. Global financial flows, national political settlements, and local rights also influence patterns of forest conversion in the context of new infrastructure. Extensive data on these elements exist, but consistent and careful analysis across boundaries and data types is lacking. This pursuit will synthesize geospatial data and existing qualitative research to ask: (1) what are likely future scenarios for relationships among infrastructure investment, forest cover and communities; (2) how do different forms of environmental governance affect these scenarios; (3) how are these different forms of environmental governance explained: what factors bring them into being?

The pursuit will: (1) collate existing qualitative data into data sets on environmental governance, policy processes and infrastructure investment; and (2) relate these to data sets on financial flows, forest loss, resource extraction, infrastructure, indigenous and community territories, and protected areas. These combined data sets will be used to (3) develop predictive socio-ecological models of the relationships among investment flows, large-scale infrastructure, resource extraction and forest cover; and (4) incorporate into these models forms of environmental governance and the socio-political factors that drive governance regimes. The pursuit focuses on Latin America with a view to developing models and frameworks of relevance to forested regions of Indonesia and Central Africa also experiencing increased infrastructure investment.

 

Project Type
Team Synthesis Project
Date
2019
Principal Investigators
Anthony Bebbington, Clark University
Rebecca Ray, Boston University
Participants
Nicholas Cuba, Clark University
Avecita Del Carmen Chicchon, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
Emily Greenspan, Oxfam America
Tracey Osborne, University of California, Merced
Susan Kandel, Fundacion PRISMA
John Rogan, Clark University
Viviana Zalles, University of Maryland
Denise Humphreys Bebbington, Clark University
Laura Sauls, College of the Holy Cross and Clark University
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