Country Reports
Alternatives to Slash-and-Burn in Brazil: Summary Report and
Synthesis of Phase II, November 2002.
ABSTRACT:
The conversion
of primary forest to other land uses in the Amazon threatens biodiversity and
releases carbon into the atmosphere, but makes economic development and poverty
reduction possible. Small-scale farmers practising slash-and-burn cultivation
account for a significant proportion of tropical deforestation. However, the
conditions necessary for increased productivity of alternative land use systems
(LUS) to improve farmer welfare and simultaneously reduce deforestation are
not well understood. The research presented in this report attempts to determine
the environmental consequences of different LUS in the western Brazilian Amazon,
whether these consequences can be mitigated with approriate technological,
policy and institutional changes and what sorts of tradeoffs exist among the
different social objectives facing policy makers.The research programme
implemented during Phase II of ASB's project in Brazil was designed to better
understand how the Government of Brazil, national and international research
organizations and donor agencies can balance global environmental objectives
with economic development and poverty reduction. The key question can be
summarized as: can intensifying land use within forest and on cleared land
simultaneously reduce deforestation and reduce poverty?
Brazil Phase II
Report (750 KB)
Executive Summary - Portuguese
(74 KB)
Figure 1: ASB Sites and
Extrapolation Domains (created with DOMAIN software) (39 KB)
Vosti, Stephen A, Julie Witcover and Chantal Line Carpentier, 2002. Agricultural intensification by smallholders in the western Brazilian Amazon: From deforestation to sustainable land use. Research Report 130. Download report
Cattaneo, Andrea, 2002. Balancing agricultural development and
deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon. Research Report 129. Download report