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First published online March 23, 2020

Deforestation in the Global South: Assessing Uneven Environmental Improvements 1993–2013

Abstract

In recent decades forest degradation declined around the globe. While encouraging, improvements emerged unevenly in the Global South. What explains these variable trends? Using longitudinal panel models with fixed effects, I assess changes to forest area from 1993–2013 in 73 countries. Drawing from sociological institutionalism and unequal ecological exchange, I make three contributions. I find that omnibus environmental laws mitigate forest loss rather than environmental international nongovernmental organizations, and, I show that dependency on trade with wealthy countries weakens the impact of these policies. I also substantiate and theorize export-led industrialization as a leading driver of deforestation. Broadly, I argue that national states are key sites of contestation between transnational political-economic forces and legitimated but pliable environmental institutions. Developing countries adopt standardized forest protections while, facing political-economic pressures, they variably consent to predatory trade terms and streamline export infrastructures. I conclude with recommendations for future research and policy implications.

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Biographies

Aaron William Tester is a PhD Candidate at the University of California, Irvine. His research focuses on the shifting role of public institutions in the politics and planning of national development. Broadly, his work engages global and transnational sociology, the sociology development, organizations, and culture.

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Article first published online: March 23, 2020
Issue published: October 2020

Keywords

  1. environmental sociology
  2. development
  3. global and transnational sociology
  4. deforestation
  5. political economy

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Aaron William Tester

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Aaron William Tester, Department of Sociology, University of California, Irvine, 3151 Social Science Plaza, Irvine, CA 92697, USA. Email: [email protected]

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