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The Politics of Sustainable Development: Native Forest Policy in Chile, Venezuela, Costa Rica and Mexico

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 1997

EDUARDO SILVA
Affiliation:
Centre for International Studies, University of Missouri, St Louis and Senior Adjunct Research Associate of the North-South Center, University of Miami

Abstract

This paper argues that the construction of two opposing ideal types of sustainable development – market-friendly and grassroots development – serves as a useful analytical tool for understanding political conflict over environmentally sensitive policy for the native, or autochthonous, forest sector. Explaining the degree to which a country has mostly market-oriented forest policy or whether it also includes significant elements of the grassroots approach requires an examination of when and how four broad factors affect outcomes: ideas, state institutions, social groups and international conditions. Paired comparisons show that cohesive teams of experts in lead ministries may define legislation and decrees proposed by the executive branch, but whether they become law depends on other factors. These are, in the first instance, the capacity of social groups to forge larger socio-political alliances, and secondly, the presence or absence of direct external intervention in the policy process. Such political dynamics also affect the degrees to which future policy begins to resolve the tension between the two approaches to the sustainable development of forests in Latin America.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
1997 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

Research for this paper was funded by grants from the Social Science Research Council with resources from the Ford Foundation, the North–South Center of the University of Miami, and the University of Missouri. For their support in the field I thank the Organisation of Tropical Studies (Costa Rica), the Instituto de Ecología of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, the Ministerio de Bienes Nacionales of Chile, the Corporación Chile-Ambiente, and the Laboratorio de Investigaciones Sociales of the Universidad Central de Venezuela. For their research assistance I thank Merlin Serrano and Clara Ferreira (Venezuela); Carlos Cuevas, Alejandra Aburto, and Carola Urrutia (Chile); Ana Batis (Mexico); and Oscar Quirós (Costa Rica). For their commentary on earlier versions of this paper and/or help in the field my gratitude to Patricio Rodrigo, Gonzalo Chapela, Sixto Pericchi, David Bray, Antonio Carrillo, Thomas Koelble, Andrew Hurrell, and Ana Lorena Bolaños. My thanks also for the very helpful commentary of the anonymous reviewer and the editors of the Journal of Latin American Studies.