Amazon;
Brazil;
forest fragmentation;
governance;
land use;
road ecology;
D O I:
10.1017/S0376892907003827
中图分类号:
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号:
090705 ;
摘要:
Unofficial roads form dense networks in landscapes, generating a litany of negative ecological outcomes, but in frontier areas they are also instrumental in local livelihoods and community development. This trade-off poses dilemmas for the governance of unofficial roads. Unofficial road building in frontier areas of the Brazilian Amazon illustrates the challenges of 'road governance.' Both state-based and community-based governance models exhibit important liabilities for governing unofficial roads. Whereas state-based governance has experienced difficulties in adapting to specific local contexts and interacting effectively with local peoples, community-based governance has a mixed record owing to social inequalities and conflicts among local interest groups. A state-community hybrid model may offer more effiective governance of unofficial road building by combining the oversight capacity of the state with locally-grounded community management via participatory decision-making.