Use of a Bayesian Belief Network to predict the impacts of commercializing non-timber forest products on livelihoods
Use of a Bayesian Belief Network to predict the impacts of commercializing non-timber forest products on livelihoods
Commercialization of non-timber forest products (NTFPs) has been widely promoted as a means of sustainably developing tropical forest resources, in a way that promotes forest conservation while supporting rural livelihoods. However, in practice, NTFP commercialization has often failed to deliver the expected benefits. Progress in analyzing the causes of such failure has been hindered by the lack of a suitable framework for the analysis of NTFP case studies, and by the lack of predictive theory. We address these needs by developing a probabilistic model based on a livelihood framework, enabling the impact of NTFP commercialization on livelihoods to be predicted. The framework considers five types of capital asset needed to support livelihoods: natural, human, social, physical, and financial. Commercialization of NTFPs is represented in the model as the conversion of one form of capital asset into another, which is influenced by a variety of socio-economic, environmental, and political factors. Impacts on livelihoods are determined by the availability of the five types of assets following commercialization. The model, implemented as a Bayesian Belief Network, was tested using data from participatory research into 19 NTFP case studies undertaken in Mexico and Bolivia. The model provides a novel tool for diagnosing the causes of success and failure in NTFP commercialization, and can be used to explore the potential impacts of policy options and other interventions on livelihoods. The potential value of this approach for the development of NTFP theory is discussed.
conservation, ntfp, sustainable development, tropical forest
24
Newton, Andrew
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Marshall, E.M.
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Schreckenberg, Kathrin
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Golicher, D.
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Te Velde, D.W.
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Edouard, F.
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Arancibia, E.
bc7f1bfb-8482-4ece-be13-fd022a4d6158
November 2006
Newton, Andrew
7909ef3f-eaaa-424a-a0ae-3ba322aa54d8
Marshall, E.M.
548ddc36-0a3e-4061-9f97-8f9a74b65a5f
Schreckenberg, Kathrin
d3fa344b-bf0d-4358-b12a-5547968f8a77
Golicher, D.
ea83c128-0200-42a8-b363-91dc15004c46
Te Velde, D.W.
bfad5ac4-12f0-4717-bfc7-480c485ec286
Edouard, F.
8b8b4c94-01f1-44a0-a2e8-d996e8138620
Arancibia, E.
bc7f1bfb-8482-4ece-be13-fd022a4d6158
Newton, Andrew, Marshall, E.M., Schreckenberg, Kathrin, Golicher, D., Te Velde, D.W., Edouard, F. and Arancibia, E.
(2006)
Use of a Bayesian Belief Network to predict the impacts of commercializing non-timber forest products on livelihoods.
Ecology and Society, 11 (2), .
Abstract
Commercialization of non-timber forest products (NTFPs) has been widely promoted as a means of sustainably developing tropical forest resources, in a way that promotes forest conservation while supporting rural livelihoods. However, in practice, NTFP commercialization has often failed to deliver the expected benefits. Progress in analyzing the causes of such failure has been hindered by the lack of a suitable framework for the analysis of NTFP case studies, and by the lack of predictive theory. We address these needs by developing a probabilistic model based on a livelihood framework, enabling the impact of NTFP commercialization on livelihoods to be predicted. The framework considers five types of capital asset needed to support livelihoods: natural, human, social, physical, and financial. Commercialization of NTFPs is represented in the model as the conversion of one form of capital asset into another, which is influenced by a variety of socio-economic, environmental, and political factors. Impacts on livelihoods are determined by the availability of the five types of assets following commercialization. The model, implemented as a Bayesian Belief Network, was tested using data from participatory research into 19 NTFP case studies undertaken in Mexico and Bolivia. The model provides a novel tool for diagnosing the causes of success and failure in NTFP commercialization, and can be used to explore the potential impacts of policy options and other interventions on livelihoods. The potential value of this approach for the development of NTFP theory is discussed.
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More information
Published date: November 2006
Keywords:
conservation, ntfp, sustainable development, tropical forest
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 76122
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/76122
ISSN: 1708-3087
PURE UUID: 9c7501ee-26e0-4a77-a786-98685e5be088
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Date deposited: 11 Mar 2010
Last modified: 08 Jan 2022 11:30
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Contributors
Author:
Andrew Newton
Author:
E.M. Marshall
Author:
Kathrin Schreckenberg
Author:
D. Golicher
Author:
D.W. Te Velde
Author:
F. Edouard
Author:
E. Arancibia
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