Skip navigation
Journal article

From large to small: Reorienting rural development policies in response to climate change, food security and poverty

This article critically reflects on policies for the development of the Amazon, which it finds are still oriented to capitalized actors and ignore smallholders’ capacities to contribute to sound local development.

Javier Godar / Published on 1 November 2013

Read the paper  Closed access

Citation

Pokorny, B., W. de Jong, J. Godar, P. Pacheco, and J. Johnson (2013). From large to small: Reorienting rural development policies in response to climate change, food security and poverty. Forest Policy and Economics 36, 52–59.

Discourses regarding the development of the Amazon region highlight the importance of the local cultures, local knowledge and participation of smallholders, such as indigenous people, traditional communities and small-scale colonists.

Current policies, however, still pursue a development model that is oriented towards global commodity markets and the capacity of well-qualified entrepreneurs with the capital required for large-scale investments, despite a growing consensus on its ecological incompatibilities, social limitations and economic risks.

Decision-makers from both governmental and non-governmental organizations widely disregard the possibility that smallholders could more actively contribute to rural development. Instead, the production practices of smallholders and their modes of social organization are perceived as obsolete and inefficient.

By presenting examples from the region, this paper argues that smallholders have the potential to manage production systems that maintain environmental stability while effectively contributing to local well-being. Therefore, the paper advocates to more effectively use local capacities for the development of rural Amazon through the promotion of small-scale production systems.

Read the article (external link to journal)

Read the paper

Closed access

SEI author

Javier Godar
Javier Godar

Senior Research Fellow

SEI Headquarters

Design and development by Soapbox.