TY - JOUR
T1 - Factors driving deforestation in common-pool resources in northern Mexico
AU - Perez-Verdin, Gustavo
AU - Kim, Yeon Su
AU - Hospodarsky, Denver
AU - Tecle, Aregai
N1 - Funding Information: We thank Armando Alanis and Alberto Sandoval-Uribe for allowing us to use CONAFOR's remote sensing information on vegetation conditions. Armando Delgado helped to obtain ejidos' cartographic information. Special thanks go for all ejidos and private ownerships who participated in the interviews. Ramon Silva-Flores, Jesus Rodríguez-Soto, Fernando Salazar, Carlos Zapata, Javier Návar, Roberto Trujillo, and J. Guadalupe Barrios facilitated these interviews. We are grateful to Evan Hjerpe, Eric Friginal, and two anonymous reviewers for their inputs in an early version of the manuscript. Financial support from CONACYT and Arizona Prop 301 is gratefully acknowledged.
PY - 2009/1
Y1 - 2009/1
N2 - The theory of collective action has been extensively used to explain the relationship between common-based property regimes and the conservation of natural resources. However, there are two key components of the theory that literature reports as puzzles in which no consensus exists about their effect on the performance of common-pool resources. These are group size and heterogeneity. This study analyzes the effects of these two key components on the effectiveness of community-based forestry, called ejidos, to protect their forest resources in northern Mexico. We used a multinomial logit model to determine the contribution of 16 explanatory variables to the dependent variable, a measure of success of ejidos defined by the presence of deforested, degraded, or forested conditions. The results show that corn yield, marginality, percent of forest area, total population, a forest value index, distance to markets, roads and towns, were all statistically significant in driving deforested conditions. Deforestation becomes more attractive for poor communities and as corn yield and distance to towns, roads, and markets decrease. In general, group size and heterogeneity had no significant effects on the presence of deforested conditions. Deforestation is driven by resource-specific characteristics, such as location and soil productivity, not by ejidos' attributes, such as total area or number of members. We argue that current institutional policies focusing on the structure of property right arrangements should be shifted (1) to provide better technology for land cultivation; (2) to reduce the marginality problem in poor communities; and (3) to strengthen local institutions.
AB - The theory of collective action has been extensively used to explain the relationship between common-based property regimes and the conservation of natural resources. However, there are two key components of the theory that literature reports as puzzles in which no consensus exists about their effect on the performance of common-pool resources. These are group size and heterogeneity. This study analyzes the effects of these two key components on the effectiveness of community-based forestry, called ejidos, to protect their forest resources in northern Mexico. We used a multinomial logit model to determine the contribution of 16 explanatory variables to the dependent variable, a measure of success of ejidos defined by the presence of deforested, degraded, or forested conditions. The results show that corn yield, marginality, percent of forest area, total population, a forest value index, distance to markets, roads and towns, were all statistically significant in driving deforested conditions. Deforestation becomes more attractive for poor communities and as corn yield and distance to towns, roads, and markets decrease. In general, group size and heterogeneity had no significant effects on the presence of deforested conditions. Deforestation is driven by resource-specific characteristics, such as location and soil productivity, not by ejidos' attributes, such as total area or number of members. We argue that current institutional policies focusing on the structure of property right arrangements should be shifted (1) to provide better technology for land cultivation; (2) to reduce the marginality problem in poor communities; and (3) to strengthen local institutions.
KW - Collective action
KW - Deforestation
KW - Durango, Mexico
KW - Ejido
KW - Multinomial logit model
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jenvman.2007.10.001
DO - 10.1016/j.jenvman.2007.10.001
M3 - Article
C2 - 18083291
SN - 0301-4797
VL - 90
SP - 331
EP - 340
JO - Journal of Environmental Management
JF - Journal of Environmental Management
IS - 1
ER -