Differentiation and concordance in smallholder land use strategies in southern Mexico's conservation frontier
- 25 March 2010
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 107 (13) , 5780-5785
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0905892107
Abstract
Forest cover transitions in the developing tropics are conditioned by agricultural change. The expansion, intensification, and diversification of agricultural land uses are tied to regional economic/environmental regimes and decisions of local farming households. Land change science and agrarian systems research share an interest in the drivers of household strategies, land use impacts, and typologies of those land uses/drivers. This study derives a typology of farming households in southern Mexico based on emergent patterns in their land use combinations and analyzes their household and policy drivers. The results reveal broadly diversified household land use portfolios as well as three emergent clusters of farmstead production orientation: (i) extensive subsistence-oriented conservationists, (ii), dual extensive-intensive farmers, and (iii) nonextensive diversified land users. Household membership in these clusters is uneven and strongly related to tenancy, land endowments, wage labor, and policy subsidies. Although most households are following a nonextensive agricultural strategy incorporating off-farm incomes, the likelihood of a regional forest transition remains debatable because of the disproportionate deforestation impacts of the less common strategies. Conservation development policies in the region need to accommodate diverse smallholder farming rationales, increase off-farm opportunities, and target sustainable development with the assistance of community conservation leaders.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Indigenous livelihoods, slash-and-burn agriculture, and carbon stocks in Eastern PanamaEcological Economics, 2007
- Cash Crops, Smallholder Decision-Making and Institutional Interactions in a Closing Frontier: Calakmul, Campeche, MexicoJournal of Latin American Geography, 2006
- Paths of Destruction and Regeneration: Globalization and Forests in the Tropics*Rural Sociology, 2002
- Land Use and Land Cover Change in Forest Frontiers: The Role of Household Life CyclesInternational Regional Science Review, 2002
- Social Capital: One or Many? Definition and MeasurementJournal of Economic Surveys, 2000
- Household strategies and rural livelihood diversificationThe Journal of Development Studies, 1998
- Slash-and-burn agriculture — household perspectivesAgriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 1996
- NAFTA's Impact on Mexico: Rural Household‐Level EffectsAmerican Journal of Agricultural Economics, 1995
- Links Between Nonfarm Income and Farm Investment in African Households: Adding the Capital Market PerspectiveAmerican Journal of Agricultural Economics, 1994
- Maize and the Free Trade Agreement between Mexico and the United StatesThe World Bank Economic Review, 1992