2006
DOI: 10.1007/3-540-32202-7_7
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Linking Land-Change Science and Policy: Current Lessons and Future Integration

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Cited by 21 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…When it comes to implementing policy, collective action is more difficult when the actors are heterogeneous (i.e., due to language and geographic barriers and the involvement of many people, communities, or institutions). Action is thus problematic and institutions are weaker in this missing middle and this makes policy action particularly difficult (Reid et al, 2006). A second issue is that making collective decisions is a process with considerable transaction costs (Cousins, 1996;Campbell et al, 2000).…”
Section: How Can Public Policy Support Efforts To Adapt To Fragmentatmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…When it comes to implementing policy, collective action is more difficult when the actors are heterogeneous (i.e., due to language and geographic barriers and the involvement of many people, communities, or institutions). Action is thus problematic and institutions are weaker in this missing middle and this makes policy action particularly difficult (Reid et al, 2006). A second issue is that making collective decisions is a process with considerable transaction costs (Cousins, 1996;Campbell et al, 2000).…”
Section: How Can Public Policy Support Efforts To Adapt To Fragmentatmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Farmers therefore invest their labour to improve the management of plots already intensively cultivated and only slowly extend them, e.g. by constructing new terraces (Tachibana et al, 2001;Reid et al, 2006). Angelsen and Kaimowitz (2001) hypothesized that, in long-settled regions with high population densities, land scarcity and well-defined land tenure rights, the increasing profitability of agriculture is less likely to drive colonisation than in other regions.…”
Section: Implications For the Forest Transition Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is particularly vital to include the viewpoints of the land users themselves throughout the process (Reid et al, 2006). Scientists need to listen in order to understand what policy-makers care the most about.…”
Section: Relevance Of the Concept In Landscape Planningmentioning
confidence: 99%