Does a crisis matter? Forest policy responses to the mountain pine beetle epidemic in British Columbia

被引:21
|
作者
Nelson, Harry [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ British Columbia, Fac Forestry, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.1744-7976.2007.00102.x
中图分类号
F3 [农业经济];
学科分类号
0202 ; 020205 ; 1203 ;
摘要
What factors are responsible for the introduction of new policies (especially those involving substantive change) is a phenomenon that is still poorly understood. Researchers have identified policy windows where a confluence of events, such as a change in government, the emergence of a new issue, and ongoing policy processes, come together to create the opportunity for new policy development. Natural disasters can open such policy windows by drawing attention to an issue and mobilizing political will. Yet at the same time, even if policy windows do open, they may not result in effective policy development. The institutional setting in which such policies are developed also plays a key role. In the case of the Canadian forest sector, the combination of public resources and private capital make policy development especially challenging. Although the scale of the Mountain Pine Beetle epidemic in British Columbia is unprecedented, and will change the nature of the forest resource (and by extension the industry and communities that rely upon it), the policy response has been limited to short-term measures. Although some policy reform was introduced, policy makers have yet to address the question of whether more fundamental changes are required in order to address the full consequences of the epidemic.
引用
收藏
页码:459 / 470
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Mountain pine beetle, global markets, and the British Columbia forest economy
    Abbott, Brant
    Stennes, Brad
    van Kooten, G. Cornelis
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 2009, 39 (07) : 1313 - 1321
  • [2] The Metagovernance of Climate Change: Institutional Adaptation to the Mountain Pine Beetle Epidemic in British Columbia
    Parkins, John R.
    JOURNAL OF RURAL AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT, 2008, 3 (02): : 7 - 26
  • [3] Current status of mountain pine beetle in British Columbia
    Ebata, T
    MOUNTAIN PINE BEETLE SYMPOSIUM: CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS, 2004, 399 : 52 - 56
  • [4] A Provincial and Regional Assessment of the Mountain Pine Beetle Epidemic in British Columbia: 1999-2008
    Wulder, M. A.
    Ortlepp, S. M.
    White, J. C.
    Nelson, T.
    Coops, N. C.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL INFORMATICS, 2010, 15 (01) : 1 - 13
  • [5] Impact of mountain pine beetle on stand dynamics in British Columbia
    Hawkes, B
    Taylor, SW
    Stockdale, C
    Shore, TL
    Alfaro, RI
    Campbell, R
    Vera, P
    MOUNTAIN PINE BEETLE SYMPOSIUM: CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS, 2004, 399 : 177 - 199
  • [6] Characteristics of forest legacies following two mountain pine beetle outbreaks in British Columbia, Canada
    Alfaro, Rene I.
    van Akker, Lara
    Hawkes, Brad
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 2015, 45 (10) : 1387 - 1396
  • [7] Mountain pine beetle epidemic
    不详
    FORESTRY CHRONICLE, 2004, 80 (01): : 11 - 11
  • [8] A positive response of mountain pine beetle to pine forest-clearcut edges at the landscape scale in British Columbia, Canada
    Huapeng Chen
    Peter Ott
    James Wang
    Tim Ebata
    Landscape Ecology, 2014, 29 : 1625 - 1639
  • [9] A positive response of mountain pine beetle to pine forest-clearcut edges at the landscape scale in British Columbia, Canada
    Chen, Huapeng
    Ott, Peter
    Wang, James
    Ebata, Tim
    LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 2014, 29 (09) : 1625 - 1639
  • [10] MODELING WILDFIRE SPREAD IN MOUNTAIN PINE BEETLE-AFFECTED FOREST STANDS, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA
    Perrakis, Daniel D. B.
    Lanoville, Rick A.
    Taylor, Stephen W.
    Hicks, Dana
    FIRE ECOLOGY, 2014, 10 (02): : 10 - 35