Literature DB >> 12174600

Common property systems, migration, and coastal ecosystems.

Sara R Curran, Tundi Agardy.   

Abstract

Common property systems are a critical institution mediating the relationship between population change and environmental outcomes, especially in coastal and marine ecosystems. Evidence from El Salvador; Goa, India; and the Solomon Islands demonstrates how the social structures and institutions stemming from patterns of human migration variably influence environmental out-comes through their effects on common property resource institutions. In each of the case studies, the demographic phenomenon is not population growth or a change in numbers, but an underlying process that affects population size and growth rates: i.e. migration and associated social relations that result from or cause more migration. The following 3 cases studies provide the respective historical and cultural context to show that there is a nonlinear link between population and environment, which when explored reveals the importance of understanding how individuals and communities are embedded in sets of social relations that must be considered when evaluating environmental policies or when determining the causes of environmental degradation.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12174600

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ambio        ISSN: 0044-7447            Impact factor:   5.129


  2 in total

1.  Do Migrants Degrade Coastal Environments? Migration, Natural Resource Extraction and Poverty in North Sulawesi, Indonesia.

Authors:  Susan Cassels; Sara R Curran; Randall Kramer
Journal:  Hum Ecol Interdiscip J       Date:  2005-06

2.  The influence of clan structure on the genetic variation in a single Ghanaian village.

Authors:  Hernando Sanchez-Faddeev; Jeroen Pijpe; Tom van der Hulle; Hans J Meij; Kristiaan J van der Gaag; P Eline Slagboom; Rudi G J Westendorp; Peter de Knijff
Journal:  Eur J Hum Genet       Date:  2013-02-27       Impact factor: 4.246

  2 in total

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