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The Robustness of Indigenous Common-property Systems to Frontier Expansion: Institutional Interplay in the Mosquitia Forest Corridor

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Type: Journal Article
Author: Hayes, Tanya M.
Journal: Conservation and Society
Volume: 6
Page(s):
Date: 2008
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10535/2924
Sector: Social Organization
Forestry
Region: South America
Central America & Caribbean
Subject(s): protected areas
social-ecological systems
colonization
agricultural expansion
common pool resources
forests
resilience
adaptation
Abstract: "This article compares how indigenous residents in the Mosquitia Forest Corridor of Honduras and Nica-ragua have responded to agricultural expansion in two distinct institutional environments: a reserve under public management and a reserve where the indigenous residents hold territorial rights. The article com-bines institutional analysis with ethnographically-based fieldwork to (1) identify whether the indigenous common-property systems in the Mosquitia remain robust when residents are confronted with private-property institutions and land markets introduced by colonists; and (2) examine the links between main-tenance of the common-property systems and the broader institutional environment. The analysis pays particular attention to how the protected area policies in each reserve impact the transaction costs in-curred in local rule-making and individual land use strategies in response to migrant farmers and ranchers. The findings suggest that the broader institutional environment, specifically the protected area policies and processes, significantly influence the transaction costs and risks involved in collective rule-making, and thereby impact the capacity of the indigenous residents to sustain their common-property systems."

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