Drawing on ethnographic and archival research, Changing Forests
explores how the indigenous Lenca community of La Campa, Honduras,
has conserved and transformed their communal forests through the
experiences of colonialism, opposition to state-controlled logging,
and the recent adoption of export-oriented coffee production. It
merges political ecology, collective-action theories, and
institutional analysis to study how the people and forests have
changed through socioeconomic and political transitions encompassed
in three broad phases: (1) the premodern period, which considers
historic perturbations in western Honduras from the period of
colonialism into the middle of the twentieth century; (2) the
period of state-led logging and intervention in La Campa, which
caused major degradation in forest cover; and (3) the recent period
in which export coffee production transformed property rights, and
people s perceptions of the forest gained new conservationist and
economic dimensions. Each phase entails perspectives and
experiences that influenced human use of forests, and shaped
subsequent transformations.
Growing social heterogeneity, population growth, and market
integration present challenges for sustainable forest management,
but satellite images show that forest cover has expanded since the
community prohibited logging in 1987. The indigenous people have
created a watershed reserve and agroforestry cooperatives, and
maintain forests as part of a resilient livelihood strategy."
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