Borneo Futures Project, People and Nature Consulting International, Jakarta, Indonesia ; Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia ; Center for International Forestry Research, Bogor, Indonesia.
PLoS One. 2013 Sep 9;8(9):e73008. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0073008. eCollection 2013.
We ascertained villagers' perceptions about the importance of forests for their livelihoods and health through 1,837 reliably answered interviews of mostly male respondents from 185 villages in Indonesian and Malaysian Borneo. Variation in these perceptions related to several environmental and social variables, as shown in classification and regression analyses. Overall patterns indicated that forest use and cultural values are highest among people on Borneo who live close to remaining forest, and especially among older Christian residents. Support for forest clearing depended strongly on the scale at which deforestation occurs. Deforestation for small-scale agriculture was generally considered to be positive because it directly benefits people's welfare. Large-scale deforestation (e.g., for industrial oil palm or acacia plantations), on the other hand, appeared to be more context-dependent, with most respondents considering it to have overall negative impacts on them, but with people in some areas considering the benefits to outweigh the costs. The interviews indicated high awareness of negative environmental impacts of deforestation, with high levels of concern over higher temperatures, air pollution and loss of clean water sources. Our study is unique in its geographic and trans-national scale. Our findings enable the development of maps of forest use and perceptions that could inform land use planning at a range of scales. Incorporating perspectives such as these could significantly reduce conflict over forest resources and ultimately result in more equitable development processes.
我们通过对来自印度尼西亚和马来西亚婆罗洲 185 个村庄的 1837 名男性受访者进行可靠的采访,确定了村民对森林对其生计和健康的重要性的看法。通过分类和回归分析,这些看法与一些环境和社会变量有关。总体模式表明,在靠近剩余森林的婆罗洲生活的人以及尤其是较年长的基督教居民中,对森林的使用和文化价值最高。对森林砍伐的支持强烈取决于砍伐的规模。小规模农业的森林砍伐通常被认为是积极的,因为它直接使人们受益。另一方面,大规模的森林砍伐(例如,用于工业油棕或金合欢种植园)似乎更加依赖于具体情况,大多数受访者认为其对他们有总体负面影响,但在一些地区的人们认为收益大于成本。采访表明,人们对森林砍伐的负面环境影响有很高的认识,对气温升高、空气污染和清洁水源丧失等问题非常关注。我们的研究在地理和跨国规模上是独特的。我们的研究结果可以为不同规模的土地利用规划提供森林利用和看法地图,从而为土地利用规划提供信息。纳入这些观点可以显著减少森林资源冲突,并最终导致更公平的发展进程。