Swidden agriculture in transition and its roles in tropical forest loss
and plantations expansion
Abstract
Tropical forest and swidden agriculture are declining, while commercial
plantation is continuously expanding. However, little is known about the
mechanisms, processes and trends of the tropical
forest-swidden-plantation (FSP) nexus. Global ongoing initiatives
including the UN-REDD Programme, not only have repeatedly emphasized the
significance of conserving forests, reforestation and afforestation, but
re-pushed swidden agriculture to the forefront of a long-standing
international debate of climate changes and biodiversity. Many facets
limit our understanding of swidden agriculture. The lack of geographic
and demographic data and their dynamics across the tropics undoubtedly
further aggravate this situation since the first appeal of eradication
of shifting cultivation by the FAO. Although recent studies have
enriched significantly our knowledge of forest loss and plantation
expansion, previous research has proceeded separately and has yet to be
integrated under the umbrella of sustainable swidden agriculture.
Efforts are needed to investigate the dynamics of the FSP nexus for sake
of a synergetic goal of climate mitigation and poverty alleviation.