ABSTRACT

Timber sourcing is shifting from extraction from natural forests to forms of cultivation that are increasingly agricultural in nature. This book takes a multidisciplinary approach to examine the socio-political, biophysical and discursive dimensions of this divergence of wood production from forests. This analysis challenges the historical integration of wood production and forest ecosystem management exemplified by the institutions of forestry with their inherent wood/forest connection. This has significant implications for how wood and forest socio-ecological systems confront change and challenge ideas about how to achieve sustainability.

Historically, the institutions of stewardship forestry were founded on ideals of sustainable systems in long-term equilibrium. However, these occur within rapidly evolving social and technological contexts that constantly challenge the maintenance of any equilibrium. This creates considerable tension within wood and forest socio-ecological systems and their institutions and governance. Moving beyond adaptation to transformation, however, requires a willingness to consider post-forestry conditions, such as integration of emerging wood cultivation systems into agricultural and landscape approaches, and increasing management of extensive forest ecosystems for non-wood values in the absence of wood production. This book includes four case studies: a global modelling of shifts in wood production and three national case studies (Australia, Indonesia and New Zealand), each analysing shifts in resilience in wood and forest socio-ecological systems using a different disciplinary approach.

This book will be of interest to advanced students, researchers and professionals in forestry, land use, conservation, rural studies and geography.

part 13I|50 pages

Transitions in forest use and wood sourcing

part 63II|88 pages

Case studies

chapter 4|20 pages

Global analysis of trends in wood sourcing

chapter 5|22 pages

A natural turn

Land use change, leakage and forest conservation

chapter 6|21 pages

A social turn

Decentralisation in Indonesia – a forestry history

chapter 7|23 pages

A discursive turn

Foresters’ speak, and transitions in New Zealand

part 151III|37 pages

Transitions and resilience