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Shadows in the Forest: Japan and the Politics of Timber in Southeast Asia (Politics, Science, and the Environment)
 
 
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Shadows in the Forest: Japan and the Politics of Timber in Southeast Asia (Politics, Science, and the Environment) [Paperback]

Peter Dauvergne (Author)

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Book Description

Politics, Science, and the Environment June 6, 1997

1998 Winner of the International Studies Association's Harold and Margaret Sprout AwardPeter Dauvergne developed the concept of a "shadow ecology" to assess the total environmental impact of one country on resource management in another country or area. Aspects of a shadow ecology include government aid and loans; corporate practices, investment, and technology transfers; and trade factors such as consumption, export and consumer prices, and import tariffs.In Shadows in the Forest, Dauvergne examines Japan's effect on commercial timber management in Indonesia, East Malaysia, and the Philippines. Japan's shadow ecology has stimulated unsustainable logging, which in turn has triggered widespread deforestation. Although Japanese practices have improved somewhat since the early 1990s, corporate trade structures and purchasing patterns, timber prices, wasteful consumption, import tariffs, and the cumulative environmental effects of past practices continue to undermine sustainable forest management in Southeast Asia.This book is the first to analyze the environmental impact of Japanese trade, corporations, and aid on timber management in the context of Southeast Asian political economies. It is also one of the first comprehensive studies of why Southeast Asian states are unable to enforce forest policies and regulations. In particular, it highlights links between state officials and business leaders that reduce state funds, distort policies, and protect illegal and unsustainable loggers. More broadly, the book is one of the first to examine the environmental impact of Northeast Asian development on Southeast Asian resource management and to analyze the indirect environmental impact of bilateral state relations on the management of one Southern resource.


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This book is the first to analyze the environmental impact of Japanese trade, corporations, and aid on timber management in the context of Southeast Asian political economies. It is also one of the first comprehensive studies of why Southeast Asian states are unable to enforce forest policies and regulations.

About the Author

Peter Dauvergne is Professor of Political Science and Canada Research Chair in Global Environmental Politics at the University of British Columbia. He is the author of the award-winning Shadows in the Forest: Japan and the Politics of Timber in Southeast Asia (MIT Press, 1997), and the coauthor (with Jennifer Clapp) of Paths to a Green World: The Political Economy of the Global Environment (MIT Press, 2005).

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Illegal and legal loggers have degraded much of Southeast Asia's old-growth forests, triggering widespread deforestation. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
plywood processors, state implementors, selective logging rules, tropical plywood consumption, timber mismanagement, tropical timber traders, tropical timber consumption, tropical log imports, shadow ecology, clientelist states, destructive loggers, environmental aid policy, total log production, timber clients, annual log production, total log exports, ecological shadow, plywood imports, log traders, environmental loans, logging guidelines, unsustainable sources, log export ban, top state leaders, cheap logs
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Southeast Asia, East Malaysia, World Bank, Sabah Foundation, Hong Kong, New Order, Environment Agency, Chief Minister Taib, Forestry Sector Program Loan, Solomon Islands, Datuk Tiong, East Kalimantan, Kuala Lumpur, Rahman Yaakub, South Korea, United States, President Suharto, Indonesian Chinese, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Sumitomo Forestry, Bureau of Forest Development, Harris Salleh, Papua New Guinea, Tan Sri Ting, After World War
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