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Corporate power in the forests of the Solomon Islands

Authors :
Dauvergne, Peter
Dauvergne, Peter
Publication Year :
1997

Abstract

This paper assesses the environmental impact of multinational companies on commercial timber management in the Solomon Islands since 1990. As more and more companies, especially from Malaysia, have spread throughout the country, the capacity of the state and societal groups to develop and enforce effective rules have become increasingly strained. Corporate bribes and pressure on state and community leaders further contribute to inappropriate policies and weak enforcement. In this context, loggers have pushed log production over three times higher than the sustainable yield. With minimal controls, and in an effort to maximise profits and minimise risks, companies in the Solomon Islands have ignored environmental and harvesting guidelines, broken promises to landowners and communities, evaded export and income taxes, developed informal and formal arrangements that lower prices and increase production, and constructed complex corporate structures that obscure financial and environmental accountability. The environmental impact of timber companies is not unique to the Solomon Islands. Similar patterns are also found in other parts of the Asia–Pacific, South America, and Africa.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
en_AU
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1291742554
Document Type :
Electronic Resource