1. Agroforestry transitions: The good, the bad and the ugly.
- Author
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Ollinaho, Ossi I. and Kröger, Markus
- Subjects
AGROFORESTRY ,FOREST degradation ,TREE farms ,SOCIAL justice ,ECOLOGICAL modernization ,FOOD production - Abstract
This article canvasses the current definitions and framings of "agroforestry" in different academic literature and policies. Three key framings of "agroforestry" are identified in the scholarship and explored for their differences. The findings suggest that the distinct schools of research on "agroforestry" focus on distinct points of departure, and these baseline situations from which transitions to what is called "agroforestry" occur vary in distinct ways from monoculture plantations to primary forests. Political-economic analysis is used to scrutinize three key "agroforestry" transition categories: agroecological, agribusiness, and forest degradation, which the article identifies as agroecoforestry (the good), agrobizforestry (the bad), and agrodeforestry (the ugly) transitions, respectively. Examples of each type are provided based on field research in Brazil, and the results are put into a global perspective. The categories are helpful in identifying the "agroforestry" transitions that are currently marketed as good solutions but might also have negative impacts and in highlighting the agroecological agroforestry transitions that would help simultaneously increase global food production, adapt to and mitigate the climate crisis, and achieve equity and social justice. • Existing scholarly framings of "agroforestry" are identified and analyzed. • Examples from Brazil are used to illustrate distinct "agroforestry" transitions. • Some transitions called agroforestry entail deforestation or agribusiness expansion. • Agroecological agroforestry increases productivity in socioecologically just ways. • Agroecoforestry transitions demand a strong social carrier. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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