2018
DOI: 10.17528/cifor/006798
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Analyzing multilevel governance in Mexico: Lessons for REDD+ from a study of land-use change and benefit sharing in Chiapas and Yucatán

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Cited by 6 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…In that respect, our study also confirms the importance of evaluating REDD+ effectiveness at the local scale or project levels, using counterfactuals and quasi-experimental methods such as BACI and SCM [6,10,12,15]. Moreover, our results also corroborate that local funding and community-based projects may be more effective in reducing deforestation than regional jurisdictional interventions with government institutions [15,18,41].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
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“…In that respect, our study also confirms the importance of evaluating REDD+ effectiveness at the local scale or project levels, using counterfactuals and quasi-experimental methods such as BACI and SCM [6,10,12,15]. Moreover, our results also corroborate that local funding and community-based projects may be more effective in reducing deforestation than regional jurisdictional interventions with government institutions [15,18,41].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…With some caveats, our results echo the Skutsch and Turnhout [41] analysis which considers that REDD+ is not effective at tackling the most important drivers of deforestation and forest degradation. In the region, REDD+ is more often effective in locales with already low deforestation rates, particularly in those with community forest management and subsistence agriculture, where much of the REDD+ effort has concentrated [18]. Conversely, our results suggest that REDD+ is more often ineffective in communities with significant presence of industrial agriculture and cattle ranching where opportunity costs may be higher and low emissions development initiatives compete with business-as-usual incentives [44], illegal activities [80], and disproportionately larger agricultural subsidies [18].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…interesante notar que el gobierno ejidal o la comunidad agraria asumen una posición relevante, lo cual refleja su poder de facto en las decisiones cotidianas en torno al uso de suelo, además de ser una consecuencia de los apoyos de la Conafor al sector social. Los resultados de la figura 2 confirman que el gobierno municipal desempeña un papel marginal en la toma de decisiones sobre el uso del suelo (Trench et al, 2018). Por otra parte, el pequeño productor individual sigue siendo dependiente de otros actores para la reproducción social de la vida campesina.…”
Section: Gmn Y Uso Del Suelo En Méxicounclassified