Forest policy involves a complex balance of governmental, social
and industrial objectives in an environment where the forests and
the institutions are also constantly changing. Across the various
forestry jurisdictions there is a wide variety of policy models
that have evolved in response to specific societal demands,
institutional structures and forest environments. This book is an
examination of forest policy in a selection of major forestry
jurisdictions, primarily the major competitors in world softwood
markets. These include the United States, British Columbia,
Alberta, New Zealand, Sweden, Finland, Chile and Russia. These
regions represent systems operating with natural forests,
plantation forests, initial forest endowments, second/third
generation forests, public forestland ownership, private forestland
ownership, open markets, highly structured markets, and various
responses to sustainability. For each jurisdiction a brief overview
to the economy, the contribution of forestry, the resource base,
the composition of the forest industry and the major stakeholders
is provided. The policy discussions include forest management,
timber pricing and export policy, environmental standards, land
ownership and use, and the institutional setting relating to
government agencies, taxation, labor and capital. Comment is
provided on the evolution of the existing policy structure and the
chapters finish with an evaluation and prognosis for the
jurisdiction. This book is a valuable reference source for forest
policy practitioners, students of forestry and political economy
and industrial decision-makers seeking to position their business
in global forestry.
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