Understanding Human-Fire Interactions in Tropical Forest Regions: A Case for Interdisciplinary Research across the Natural and Social Sciences
Loading...
Date
2011
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
"Fire in the forested tropics has profound environmental, economic, and social impacts at multiple geographical scales. Causes of tropical fires are widely documented, although research contributions are from many disciplines, and each tends to focus on specific facets of a research problem, which might limit understanding of fire as a complex social-ecological system. We conducted a systematic review to (1) examine geographic and methodological focus in tropical fire research; (2) identify which types of landholders are the focus of the research effort; (3) test for a research method effect on the variables, e.g., socio-political, economic, and climatic, identified as causes of and proposed management solutions
to tropical fire; and (4) examine relationships between causal factors and proposed solutions. Results from
51 studies show distinct geographic and methodological tendencies in the literature. Few studies explicitly
identify landholder types, and no social studies focused on large-landholders. Multiple drivers and potential
solutions to preventing fire are identified and the research approach adopted had the strongest influence
on the socioeconomic, direct fire management and landscape characteristics variables. There was an overall
mismatch between identified cause and proposed management solution. These findings indicate that mixed
method approaches are imperative to understanding the coupled human-nature system of fire and to improve
rural development and management strategies to curtail tropical fire spread."
Description
Keywords
fire ecology, scale, social-ecological systems, forests--tropics