2022
DOI: 10.5751/es-13395-270345
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Carbon emissions from land acquisitions in Laos

Abstract: Large-scale land acquisitions repeatedly fall short of their acclaimed socioeconomic benefits and are associated with unintended social, economic, and ecological costs. In Laos, the government has started to question its own "Turning Land into Capital" policy, and reviews land acquisitions or concessions with regard to their socioeconomic impacts. Empirical investigations of environmental impacts of land concessions, however, remain underrepresented. We link the nation-wide concession development between 2001 … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…For instance, the economic development pathway, which historically meant urbanization, industrialization and resulting rural land abandonment, is characterized in contemporary Southeast Asia by rapid transitions to capitalist and export-orientated cash crops (Hall 2011, Kröger 2014, Hirsch et al 2022. In Laos, for example, 12% of the domestic land surface has been converted to agricultural and tree plantations or mining sites through large-scale land acquisitions since 2001, with diverse ecological and community impacts (Bauernschuster et al 2022b, Magliocca et al 2022. The state policy pathwaywhere governments push for a forest transition for wood supply and conservation goalsis also clearly partially productivist.…”
Section: Neglecting Productivism As the Hidden Driving Forcementioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, the economic development pathway, which historically meant urbanization, industrialization and resulting rural land abandonment, is characterized in contemporary Southeast Asia by rapid transitions to capitalist and export-orientated cash crops (Hall 2011, Kröger 2014, Hirsch et al 2022. In Laos, for example, 12% of the domestic land surface has been converted to agricultural and tree plantations or mining sites through large-scale land acquisitions since 2001, with diverse ecological and community impacts (Bauernschuster et al 2022b, Magliocca et al 2022. The state policy pathwaywhere governments push for a forest transition for wood supply and conservation goalsis also clearly partially productivist.…”
Section: Neglecting Productivism As the Hidden Driving Forcementioning
confidence: 99%
“…With the progress of human civilization, energy shortage and environmental pollution have become potential threats to human societies. [1][2][3][4] Therefore, green power generating technologies have been developed. For example, a triboelectric nanogenerator (TENG) gathers mechanical energy generated by various frictional motions on various interfaces by utilizing the triboelectric effect.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%