Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
T. Reardon, S. Vosti (1995)
Links between rural poverty and the environment in developing countries: Asset categories and investment povertyWorld Development, 23
D. Sellen (1999)
FAO 1996. The Sixth World Food Survey. (Food and Agriculuture Organization of the United Nations, Rome.)Journal of Biosocial Science, 31
D. Reed (2019)
Structural Adjustment and the Environment
M. Khan (1987)
Macroeconomic adjustment in developing countries : a policy perspectiveWorld Bank Research Observer, 2
I. Singh (1987)
Agricultural household models : extensions, applications, and policyAmerican Journal of Agricultural Economics, 69
D. Southgate (1991)
TROPICAL DEFORESTATION AND AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT IN LATIN AMERICA
D. Lal, S. Rajapatirana (1987)
Foreign trade regimes and economic growth in developing countriesWorld Bank Research Observer, 2
M. Cropper, C. Griffiths, Muthukumara Mani (1997)
Roads, Population Pressures, and Deforestation in Thailand, 1976-89
J. Benhin, Edward Barbier (2001)
The Effects of the Structural Adjustment Program on Deforestation in GhanaAgricultural and Resource Economics Review, 30
T. Banks (1999)
State, Community and Common Property in Xinjiang: Synergy or Strife?Development Policy Review, 17
E. Barbier, J. Burgess (1996)
Economic analysis of deforestation in MexicoEnvironment and Development Economics, 1
T. Reardon, C. Barrett (1999)
The Ambiguous Effects of Policy Reforms on Sustainable Agricultural Intensification in Africa: Renewed Threats to Fragile Margins?Development Economics
Ramón López (1997)
Environmental externalities in traditional agriculture and the impact of trade liberalization: the case of GhanaJournal of Development Economics, 53
W. Makundi, J. Sathaye, O. Cerutti (1992)
Carbon emissions and sequestration in forests: Case studies from seven developing countries. Volume 1, Summary: Draft
Ramón López (1998)
Agricultural Intensification, Common Property Resources and the Farm-HouseholdEnvironmental and Resource Economics, 11
S. Levy, S. Wijnbergen (1992)
Transition problems in economic reform : agriculture in the Mexico - U.S. free trade agreement
R. Schneider (1995)
Government and the Economy on the Amazon Frontier
W. Jaeger (1992)
The Effects of Economic Policies on African Agriculture
T. Reardon, C. Barrett, V. Kelly, K. Savadogo (1999)
Policy Reforms and Sustainable Agricultural Intensification in AfricaDevelopment Policy Review, 17
A. Janvry, E. Sadoulet, G. Anda (1995)
NAFTA and Mexico's maize producersWorld Development, 23
J. Stiglitz (1987)
Some theoretical aspects of agricultural policiesWorld Bank Research Observer, 2
E. Barbier (1997)
The economic determinants of land degradation in developing countriesPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, 352
Willy, akundl, J. Sathaye, O. Cerutti, W. Makundi (1992)
Carbon emissions and sequestration in forests: Case studies from seven developing countries
O. Badiane, G. Shively (1998)
SPATIAL INTEGRATION, TRANSPORT COSTS, AND THE RESPONSE OF LOCAL PRICES TO POLICY CHANGES IN GHANA. IN: RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN TRANSPORT ECONOMICS
S. Levy, S. Wijnbergen (1992)
Maize and the free trade agreement between Mexico and the United StatesThe World Bank Economic Review, 6
M. Munasinghe (1995)
Economywide Policies and the Environment: Lessons from Experience
E. Barbier, J. Burgess (1997)
The Economics of Tropical Forest Land Use OptionsLand Economics, 73
K. Deininger, B. Minten (1999)
Poverty, Policies, and Deforestation: The Case of MexicoEconomic Development and Cultural Change, 47
This paper examines evidence of the effects of economic liberalization and globalization on rural resource degradation in developing countries. The principal resource effects of concern are processes of land use change leading to forestland conversion, degradation and deforestation. The main trends in globalization of interest are trade liberalization and economy‐wide reforms in developing countries that have ‘opened up’ the agroindustrial sectors, thus increasing their export‐orientation. Such reforms have clearly spurred agroindustrialization, rural development and economic growth, but there is also concern that there may be direct and indirect impacts on rural resource degradation. The direct impacts may occur as increased agricultural activity leads to conversion of forests and increased land degradation from ‘unsustainable’ production methods. However, there may also be indirect effects if agroindustrial development displaces landless, near‐landless and rural poor generally, who then migrate to marginal agricultural lands and forest frontier regions. This paper explores these direct and indirect effects of globalization and agroindustrialization on rural resource degradation both generally, plus through examining case study evidence. The paper focuses in particular on the examples of structural adjustment, trade liberalization and agricultural development in Ghana, and maize sector liberalization in Mexico under North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
Agricultural Economics – Wiley
Published: Sep 1, 2000
Keywords: ; ; ; ; ;
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.