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Library Of mice and men: Why the unintended consequences of carbon markets matter

Of mice and men: Why the unintended consequences of carbon markets matter

Of mice and men: Why the unintended consequences of carbon markets matter
Land Use Policy Volume 61

Resource information

Date of publication
января 2017
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
lupj:S0264837716309024
Pages
5

Land tenure remains one of the most critical factors determining equity under REDD+, as we demonstrated through our previous article, ‘Roots of inequity: how the implementation of REDD+ reinforces past injustices”. Githiru responded to this paper, with some apparent challenges to both the empirical basis and theoretical arguments, that we had put forward. In this rebuttal, we demonstrate that there were no empirical differences between our original paper and Githiru’s response that had bearing on our findings, but that there are substantial differences in our interpretations of legality and equity, and consequently divergence about who can expect to benefit from REDD+. In a context where land ownership has historically and presently involved processes of dispossession, marginalization and even evictions, this rebuttal illustrates the complexity of the dominant discourse on land tenure and benefits under REDD+ and shows how social safeguards will need to take historical context and people’s current entitlements and agency into account, if equitable outcomes are to be defined and realized.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Chomba, Susan
Kariuki, Juliet
Lund, Jens Friis
Sinclair, Fergus

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