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1 August 2011 Integrating Ecological and Socioeconomic Monitoring of Working Forests
Rachel A. Neugarten, Steven A. Wolf, Richard C. Stedman, Timothy H. Tear
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Abstract

Large-scale sell-offs of industrial timberlands in the United States have prompted public and private investments in a new class of “working forest” land deals, notable for their large size and complex divisions of property rights. These transactions have been pitched as “win-win-win” deals that provide social, economic, and ecological benefits. Despite hundreds of millions of dollars invested in these transactions, we found a paucity of evidence that their supposed benefits are being realized. Monitoring programs necessary to gather such evidence tend to be underfunded, short term, and focused on a limited set of indicators. The few projects with more comprehensive monitoring programs had long-term funding sources, formal mechanisms for incorporating data into subsequent management decisions, and combined multidisciplinary monitoring techniques. We propose that a relatively modest allocation of funds to monitoring could help assess—and hopefully improve—the effectiveness of current and future transactions, to see if the promise of “win-win-win” is actually delivered.

© 2011 by American Institute of Biological Sciences. All rights reserved. Request permission to photocopy or reproduce article content at the University of California Press's Rights and Permissions Web site at www.ucpressjournals.com/reprintinfo.asp.
Rachel A. Neugarten, Steven A. Wolf, Richard C. Stedman, and Timothy H. Tear "Integrating Ecological and Socioeconomic Monitoring of Working Forests," BioScience 61(8), 631-637, (1 August 2011). https://doi.org/10.1525/bio.2011.61.8.10
Published: 1 August 2011
JOURNAL ARTICLE
7 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
conservation easements
forest certification
monitoring
socioeconomic well-being
working forest
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