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Cited by 49 publications
(34 citation statements)
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References 21 publications
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“…In this context, the influence of agricultural land in storing value decreased, even if it was not completely eliminated. Hence, the authors suggest that the demand for agricultural land became more closely related to its productive dimension than to its capacity to store value, which is an economic dimension linked to speculation 1 [40]. In fact, with the subsequent exchange devaluation that began in 1999, exports were favored and the prices paid for important crops such as sugarcane, corn and soy increased, followed by a rise in the price of agricultural land in the primary producing regions for these commodities [4,30]-among them, the state of São Paulo.…”
Section: Open Accessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this context, the influence of agricultural land in storing value decreased, even if it was not completely eliminated. Hence, the authors suggest that the demand for agricultural land became more closely related to its productive dimension than to its capacity to store value, which is an economic dimension linked to speculation 1 [40]. In fact, with the subsequent exchange devaluation that began in 1999, exports were favored and the prices paid for important crops such as sugarcane, corn and soy increased, followed by a rise in the price of agricultural land in the primary producing regions for these commodities [4,30]-among them, the state of São Paulo.…”
Section: Open Accessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pará is famous for land conflicts and properties continue to be claimed, expropriated, and fought over-sometimes violently (Schmink, 1982;Fearnside, 2001;Wright and Wolford, 2003;Simmons, 2005). Forged titles are common, official titles are rare, and the ability to make and defend claims to land is at the forefront of people's minds, especially in frontier regions (Oliveira, 2013;Campbell, 2014;Reydon et al, 2015). Faced with the challenge of informal and contested land rights in much of the state (one study estimated as much as 53% as of 2008) (Barreto et al, 2008), the designers of Pará's CAR program adopted a two-phased system.…”
Section: Background: Land Registration In Pará's Rural Environmental mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If property holders did not feel that registration increased the likelihood of enforcement, they would have had little reason to change deforestation behavior. This may especially be the case for larger properties whose boundaries were more likely to be publicly documented by other means outside of the CAR (Rajão and Vurdubakis, 2013;Reydon et al, 2015) and thus were already vulnerable to enforcement associated with monitoring programs that preceded the CAR, such as the DETER satellite monitoring program (Assunç ão et al, 2014;Arima et al, 2014). A report from the Amazon Environmental Research Institute (IPAM) found a similar result of little overall impact from Pará's CAR, though they report larger reductions on small and medium properties and an increase in deforestation on large properties (Azevedo et al, 2014).…”
Section: Figmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the initial stage of colonization, INCRA should limit concessions to one 100-ha lote , not authorizing larger holdings, since cattle ranching tends to predominate in larger properties (Godar et al 2012). Reydon et al (2015) propose developing a land-governance system where the property can be registered, identified, and updated based on satellite images and information provided by landowners. The ideal territorial management system should be integrated at all institutional scales (federal, state, and municipal).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%