generic viagra
vicodin

Archive for March, 2008

Presentation on IPCC process and results

Whilst looking something up on the internet I stumbled across an excellent presentation on the IPCC process and results by Steve Running from the University of Montana.  Aside from the content, which looks at the responses of ecosystems to climate change amongst other things, this is a really great means of putting presentations online.

Environmental Capital Blog

I apologise for the silence of late.  Been a busy few weeks, and as regular readers will know, we’re coming to the end of our project and are scrambling to get the final report in order.  We’ll be posting the draft version to this website hopefully in about a week.

But just to keep the blog alive in the meantime, thought I’d link to an interesting blog from the Wall Street Journal entitled Environmental Capital.  Many of the stories are US-centric, but there are some posts about international issues such as carbon financing, poverty vs. environment trade-offs, and surprisingly, biofuels.  Check it out.  Thanks Mark for the link.

Environment and quality of life

For the Spanish speakers out there, there’ll be a one-day meeting on the environment and quality of life in Chile at the end of May.  More info available here.

Illegal loggers and the law enforcers

The ever enlightening Polex alerts have just produced their latest storyline, this time on the problems of enforcing forest protection around illegal loggers:

When asked to name the worst part of his job, the district-level forestry official quickly answered, “Going out on patrol”. Poorly equipped, at risk of violent encounters, and resented by local communities, his attitude towards forest law enforcement is probably typical of many foresters, especially in developing countries. Without adequate support from higher levels of government and local communities, their efforts to stop forest crime are both thankless and ineffective.

In Illegal Logging: Law Enforcement, Livelihoods and the Timber Trade, Luca Tacconi and his colleagues identify several causes of illegal logging which help to illuminate the district forester’s predicament. Local communities often do not perceive illegal logging to be harmful or illegitimate, and their position may be supported by local governments. In Indonesia following decentralization, for example, the distinction between legal and illegal logging became blurred as district governments began issuing permits for timber extraction considered illegal by the central government.

And while there may be real resource and capacity constraints on the ability of forestry agencies to tackle illegal logging, Tacconi suggests that lax government attempts to control forest crime may reflect the priority given to other objectives. “Collusive” corruption – in which government officials and private actors work together to steal state timber resources – is particularly difficult to root out. Tacconi asserts that efforts to strengthen the capacity of forestry agencies to overcome forest crime will be ineffective without strong government commitment to that objective.

While acknowledging that illegal logging is driven by social and political factors beyond the control of the individual forest manager, William Magrath and his colleagues nevertheless see value in strengthening efforts to prevent timber theft at the level of the forest management unit. In Timber Theft Prevention: Introduction to Security for Forest Managers, they argue that forest crime is largely predictable, and therefore preventable, up to a point. Even though the underlying causes of burglary may be complex, it doesn’t make sense to leave your doors and windows unlocked. The study provides a number of practical measures that can be applied in a wide range of situations faced by forest managers.

Borrowing concepts from the fields of asset protection and industrial security, the authors illustrate how managing the risk of theft can be integrated into forestry planning and operations. Success depends on clarity regarding what is “legal” and what is “illegal”, and engagement with local communities to ensure that their incentives are aligned with increasing forest security. “Social fencing” can help control criminal trespass in forest areas, in addition to such simple measures as blocking or decommissioning access roads. The study also provides a list of “red flags” to alert authorities to fraud in timber-related transactions.

So, is it worth investing in forest law enforcement in light of the complex underlying causes of forest crime outlined by Tacconi et al? In his concluding chapter, Magrath says that forest security begins with public policies for good governance, and that development aid should target governments that are prepared to take proactive steps to prevent illegal logging. Our district forester needs both government commitment and practical tools to do his job. Where there’s a will, there’s a way.

Global malaria data

Another decent global data source, this time on malaria.  The Malaria Atlas Project have just released the first map of malaria for over 40 years, providing some surprises.  The kind MAPers have put together a spiffy Google Earth interface for viewing it.  I haven’t spotted a way of downloading the data for import into a GIS, but I might have just missed it.