Enhancing social indicators research in a forest-dependent community

被引:7
|
作者
Parkins, J [1 ]
机构
[1] Nat Resources Canada, Canadian Forestry Serv, No Forestry Ctr, Edmonton, AB T6H 3S5, Canada
来源
FORESTRY CHRONICLE | 1999年 / 75卷 / 05期
关键词
forest-dependent communities; social indicators; employment; migration; mobility; community well-being; social capital;
D O I
10.5558/tfc75771-5
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
Forest industry host communities are receiving increased attention from policy makers, academics, and municipal leaders. Recently, this attention is trained on measuring social and economic change at the community level and on identifying and developing avenues to greater community well-being. This paper examines aspects of two common social indicators, employment and migration, in the context of a forest-dependent community in Northern Alberta. By using statistical information along with two other major data sources that include interviews with local residents and a variety of reports from local institutions, specific social changes taking place within the community are described. Readers are cautioned against relying solely on statistical information to measure change and are encouraged to triangulate data with local sources. Such efforts may be more time consuming but the results are likely to provide more important insights into how and why certain communities are prospering while others are struggling. The paper concludes with a discussion of social capital as a crucial dimension of community well-being.
引用
收藏
页码:771 / 780
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Indicators of forest-dependent community sustainability: The evolution of research
    Beckley, T
    Parkins, J
    Stedman, R
    [J]. FORESTRY CHRONICLE, 2002, 78 (05): : 626 - 636
  • [2] A study of the role of forest and forest-dependent community in Myanmar
    Khaine, Inkyin
    Woo, Su Young
    Kang, Hoduck
    [J]. FOREST SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2014, 10 (04) : 197 - 200
  • [3] COMMUNITY STABILITY AND THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL WELL-BEING IN FOREST-DEPENDENT COMMUNITIES
    BECKLEY, TM
    [J]. SOCIETY & NATURAL RESOURCES, 1995, 8 (03) : 261 - 266
  • [4] Can social innovation make a difference to forest-dependent communities?
    Nijnik, Maria
    Secco, Laura
    Miller, David
    Melnykovych, Mariana
    [J]. FOREST POLICY AND ECONOMICS, 2019, 100 : 207 - 213
  • [5] Research and conservation of forest-dependent tinamou species in Amazonia Peru
    Schelsky, WM
    [J]. ORNITOLOGIA NEOTROPICAL, 2004, 15 : 317 - 321
  • [6] A Community Resilience Model for Understanding and Assessing the Sustainability of Forest-Dependent Communities
    Akamani, Kofi
    [J]. HUMAN ECOLOGY REVIEW, 2012, 19 (02) : 99 - 109
  • [7] Comparing the social values of forest-dependent, provincial and national publics for socially sustainable forest management
    Robson, M
    Hawley, A
    Robinson, D
    [J]. FORESTRY CHRONICLE, 2000, 76 (04): : 615 - 622
  • [8] Poverty and employment in forest-dependent counties
    Berck, P
    Costello, C
    Fortmann, L
    Hoffmann, S
    [J]. FOREST SCIENCE, 2003, 49 (05) : 763 - 777
  • [9] Carbon emission reductions by substitution of improved cookstoves and cattle mosquito nets in a forest-dependent community
    Chan, Somanta
    Sasaki, Nophea
    Ninomiya, Hiroshi
    [J]. GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION, 2015, 4 : 434 - 444
  • [10] Patterns in island endemic forest-dependent bird research: the Caribbean as a case-study
    Eleanor S. Devenish-Nelson
    Douglas Weidemann
    Jason Townsend
    Howard P. Nelson
    [J]. Biodiversity and Conservation, 2019, 28 (7) : 1885 - 1904