Cows versus rubber: Changing livelihoods among Amazonian extractivists

DS Salisbury, M Schmink - Geoforum, 2007 - Elsevier
DS Salisbury, M Schmink
Geoforum, 2007Elsevier
The livelihood strategies of former rubber tappers in the Amazon region are rapidly shifting
from extraction of non-timber forest products to mixed systems based on agriculture and
small scale cattle ranching. Using a combination of participatory methods and Geographical
Information Systems, a case study in western Acre, Brazil explores how rubber tapper
livelihood strategies may be changing, and the implications of these changes for land use
and forest cover. Field (cattle pasture and agriculture) expansion and the decline of forest …
The livelihood strategies of former rubber tappers in the Amazon region are rapidly shifting from extraction of non-timber forest products to mixed systems based on agriculture and small scale cattle ranching. Using a combination of participatory methods and Geographical Information Systems, a case study in western Acre, Brazil explores how rubber tapper livelihood strategies may be changing, and the implications of these changes for land use and forest cover. Field (cattle pasture and agriculture) expansion and the decline of forest extractivism present challenges to many regional conservation and development projects such as sustainable settlement projects and extractive reserves seeking to develop forest-based livelihood alternatives to limit deforestation. Sustainability goals require researchers and policy makers to address the still experimental status of these forest-based organizational units, the heterogeneity and dynamism of extractivist livelihoods, and the necessary importance of small-scale cattle ranching for insurance and income generation among many former and current extractivists.
Elsevier