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A political ecology of jurisdictional REDD+: investigating social-environmentalism, climate change mitigation, and environmental (in)justice in the Brazilian Amazon

Marcelo Santos Rocha da Silva, Joel E. Correia

2022Journal of Political Ecology27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article contributes to political ecologies of forest-based climate change mitigation strategies by assessing Brazil's first sub-national jurisdictional REDD+ program. Proponents of jurisdictional REDD+ argue that the approach brings more social and environmental benefits than small-scale REDD+ projects and addresses negative socio-economic impacts of deforestation pressures on forest-dependent communities. Our analysis tells a different story. We assess Acre's sub-national jurisdictional (SNJ) program to show that reworking the scale of REDD+ is not only key to its persistence and stabilization, but also that implementation politics often further environmental injustice. We draw qualitative field research in the state of Acre into conversation with a critical analysis of SISA and the ISA Carbono program implementation. Our findings illustrate two interwoven points vital to political ecologies of REDD+. First, the social-environmental ambitions of Acre's SNJ REDD+ program were strongly influenced by the political ecologies of popular movements and a history of state-led environmental governance initiatives. Second, Acre's SNJ REDD+ has not met several of its social-environmental goals like bolstering forest-dependent peoples' rights or equitably distributing program benefits across sectors, despite operating most extensively on the lands of forest-dependent communities. Consequently, we argue that Acre's SNJ REDD+ track record has reinforced rather than alleviated injustice against Indigenous peoples and traditional forest extractivist communities.

Topics & Concepts

InjusticeIndigenousPoliticsPolitical ecologyEnvironmentalismAmazon rainforestEnvironmental resource managementPolitical scienceReducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradationEnvironmental justiceAcreClimate changeGeographyEcologyAgroforestryEconomicsEnvironmental scienceCarbon stockLawBiologyConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource ManagementAgriculture, Land Use, Rural DevelopmentGlobal trade, sustainability, and social impact
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