International Development Research Centre (IDRC) Canada     
idrc.ca HOME > IDRC Publications > IDRC Books Online > All our books > DEFORESTATION IN VIET NAM
 Topic Explorer  
IDRC Books Online
     New
     Economics
     Environment & Biodiversity
     Food & Agriculture
     Health
     Information & Communication
     Natural Resources
     Science & Technology
     Social & Political Sciences
     Development & Evaluation
    All our books

IDRC in the world
Subscribe
Development Dossiers
Free Online Books
IDRC Explore Magazine
Research Programs
 People
Bill Carman

ID: 9318
Added: 2002-09-09 15:47
Modified: 2005-06-17 14:14
Refreshed: 2006-01-25 04:21

Click here to get the URL for the RSS format file RSS format file

DEFORESTATION IN VIET NAM
Prev Book(s) 111 of 193 Next

869.jpg DEFORESTATION IN VIET NAM

Rodolphe De Koninck

IDRC 1999
ISBN 0-88936-869-4
110 pp.

 Browse from this page Purchase book online

Disponible en français

At the beginning of this century, gibbons could have travelled from China to Singapore by swinging from tree to tree. The past 50 years, however, have seen the forests of Southeast Asia largely disappear. The reasons for this devastation are still poorly understood, but the results are tragically all too visible. Increased soil erosion, reduced water-storage capacity, changes in microclimates, and loss of nutrients have led to a decline in the productivity of marginal lands and the impoverishment of local communities.

In Viet Nam, the situation is particularly urgent. Continuing soil degradation poses an ominous threat to that country's natural-resource-based economy. Further, the pressure on Viet Nam's remaining forest resources has been redoubled as the Vietnamese government opts for a more open and market-driven economy.

Deforestation in Viet Nam reports on a innovative andtimely study by a team of Vietnamese and Canadian researchers. It presents a labourious historical analysis of the smallest changes affecting soil use, forest cover, population, and political and socioeconomic characteristics. The book concludes with suggestions for future research and emphasizes the importance of examining the problems of natural-resource degradation in their proper local and historical contexts.

THE AUTHOR

Rodolphe De Koninck is Professor of Geography at Université Laval in Ste-Foy (Canada). Prof. De Koninck is a member of the Royal Society of Canada and currently President of the Canadian Council for Southeast Asian Studies. He was recently awarded the 1998 Prix Jacques-Rousseau for interdisciplinarity by the Association canadienne-française pour l'avancement des sciences (Acfas).

Prev Book(s) 111 of 193 Next

 Document(s)

Foreword Rodolphe De Koninck 2002


Avant-Propos 2002


Chapter 1 - Introduction: the nature and magnitude of the problem 2002


Chapter 2 - The case of Viet Nam 2002


Chapter 3 - The implementation of the research project 2002


Chapter 4 - The results from Tuyen Quang province 2002


Chapter 5 - The results from Lam Dong province 2002


Chapter 6 - Conclusion: the magnitude of the challenge 2002


Appendix 1 - Acronyms and abbreviations 2002


References 2002




   guest (Read)(Ottawa)   Login Home|Jobs|Important Notice|General Infomation|Contact Us|Webmaster|Low Bandwidth
Copyright 1995 - 2005 © International Development Research Centre Canada     
Latin America Middle East And North Africa Sub-Saharan Africa Asia IDRC in the world