Author/Authors :
Kamanga، نويسنده , , Penjani and Vedeld، نويسنده , , Paul and Sjaastad، نويسنده , , Espen، نويسنده ,
DocumentNumber :
3540496
Title Of Article :
Forest incomes and rural livelihoods in Chiradzulu District, Malawi
شماره ركورد :
2736
Latin Abstract :
This paper examines forest income among rural dwellers in one of Malawiʹs most densely populated districts, Chiradzulu. 160 households were interviewed in two sites, only 20 km apart, purposely selected on the basis of access to a forest reserve. People are extremely poor, with 97% having incomes of less than 1 USD/day. Forest income constitutes around 15% of total income; only non-farm income (47%) and agriculture (28%) rank higher. The poorest segment depends more on forest income than the least poor group, but the medium income group exhibits the highest dependence. Fuelwood constitutes the major source of such income followed by fodder. The incomes mainly support current consumption. People with better access to the forest reserve have higher total income, forest income, and relative forest income. As revealed through a Gini-coefficient analysis, forest resources have an important income equalizing effect across rural households. A particular group of resource poor farmers (8.1% of sample), with little access to agricultural land and a high representation of female heads, derives an average of 65% of their income from the forest. An important policy lesson is that restricting peopleʹs access to forest resources can have substantial effects on household livelihoods and welfare, and would serve to increase income inequalities in the area. Livelihood researchers should now recognize the substantial income from forest resources.
From Page :
613
NaturalLanguageKeyword :
Forest income , Poverty , dependence , diversification , Distribution , Livelihoods
JournalTitle :
Studia Iranica
To Page :
624
To Page :
624
Link To Document :
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