We are no longer updating the Research Digest. All content remains.
The Permaculture Research Digest has summaries of newly published permaculture-related research. All items are hyper-linked to the original publication.
The 'January 2013' archive contains 60 items published in 2012.
Items marked with a # have restricted public access, although abstracts are freely available.
There is a range of forest management systems between pure extraction
and plantation systems. Such “intermediate systems” range from wild
forests modified for increased production of selected products to
anthropogenic forests with a high-density of valuable species growing
within a relatively diverse and complex structure. These systems,
classed here as “Forest Garden Systems” (FGS), have important
socioeconomic and ecological benefits, and yet they have been largely
overlooked by researchers, development practitioners, and policy makers.
Based on case examples and the authors’ experience, this paper analyzes
the socioeconomic and institutional factors that explain the
development, persistence, and decline of FGS.
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