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RESEARCH ARTICLES

Constructing walls of carbon – the complexities of community, carbon sequestration and protected areas in Uganda

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Pages 421-440 | Received 12 Sep 2012, Accepted 01 Apr 2013, Published online: 08 Jun 2013

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Read on this site (8)

Miho Taka & Jessica Ayesha Northey. (2020) Civil society and spaces for natural resource governance in Kenya. Third World Quarterly 41:10, pages 1740-1757.
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Klara Fischer & Flora Hajdu. (2018) The importance of the will to improve: how ‘sustainability’ sidelined local livelihoods in a carbon-forestry investment in Uganda. Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning 20:3, pages 328-341.
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Mikael Bergius, Tor A. Benjaminsen & Mats Widgren. (2018) Green economy, Scandinavian investments and agricultural modernization in Tanzania. The Journal of Peasant Studies 45:4, pages 825-852.
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Kristen Lyons & Peter Westoby. (2014) Carbon markets and the new ‘Carbon Violence’: A Ugandan study. International Journal of African Renaissance Studies - Multi-, Inter- and Transdisciplinarity 9:2, pages 77-94.
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Dickson Gerald Mauki, Orestus Kinyero & Filbert Meela. (2023) The influence of Brachylaena huillensis O. hoffm on diversity, abundance and structure of Mtunguru Forest Reserve in Tanzania. Environmental and Sustainability Indicators, pages 100273.
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Kirstine Lund Christiansen, Flora Hajdu, Emil Planting Mollaoglu, Alice Andrews, Wim Carton & Klara Fischer. (2023) “Our burgers eat carbon”: Investigating the discourses of corporate net-zero commitments. Environmental Science & Policy 142, pages 79-88.
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Rob MarchantRob Marchant. 2021. East Africa’s Human Environment Interactions. East Africa’s Human Environment Interactions 245 310 .
Mareike Blum. (2020) Whose climate? Whose forest? Power struggles in a contested carbon forestry project in Uganda. Forest Policy and Economics 115, pages 102137.
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Klara Fischer, Filippa Giertta & Flora Hajdu. (2019) Carbon-binding biomass or a diversity of useful trees? (Counter)topographies of carbon forestry in Uganda. Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space 2:1, pages 178-199.
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Gargule Achiba. (2019) Navigating Contested Winds: Development Visions and Anti-Politics of Wind Energy in Northern Kenya. Land 8:1, pages 7.
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Karin Edstedt & Wim Carton. (2018) The benefits that (only) capital can see? Resource access and degradation in industrial carbon forestry, lessons from the CDM in Uganda. Geoforum 97, pages 315-323.
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Grete Benjaminsen & Randi Kaarhus. (2018) Commodification of forest carbon: REDD+ and socially embedded forest practices in Zanzibar. Geoforum 93, pages 48-56.
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Alexis Comber & Werner Kuhn. (2018) Fuzzy difference and data primitives: a transparent approach for supporting different definitions of forest in the context of REDD+. Geographica Helvetica 73:2, pages 151-163.
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J.A. Fisher, C.J. Cavanagh, T. Sikor & D.M. Mwayafu. (2018) Linking notions of justice and project outcomes in carbon offset forestry projects: Insights from a comparative study in Uganda. Land Use Policy 73, pages 259-268.
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Emma Jane Lord. 2018. Global Forest Governance and Climate Change. Global Forest Governance and Climate Change 115 143 .
Patrick Bigger & Benjamin D. Neimark. (2017) Weaponizing nature: The geopolitical ecology of the US Navy’s biofuel program. Political Geography 60, pages 13-22.
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George C. Schoneveld. (2017) Host country governance and the African land rush: 7 reasons why large-scale farmland investments fail to contribute to sustainable development. Geoforum 83, pages 119-132.
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Adrian Nel. (2017) Contested carbon: Carbon forestry as a speculatively virtual, falteringly material and disputed territorial assemblage. Geoforum 81, pages 144-152.
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Adeniyi Asiyanbi, Albert Arhin & Usman Isyaku. (2017) REDD+ in West Africa: Politics of Design and Implementation in Ghana and Nigeria. Forests 8:3, pages 78.
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Adeniyi P. Asiyanbi. (2016) A political ecology of REDD+: Property rights, militarised protectionism, and carbonised exclusion in Cross River. Geoforum 77, pages 146-156.
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Carol Richards & Kristen Lyons. (2016) The new corporate enclosures: Plantation forestry, carbon markets and the limits of financialised solutions to the climate crisis. Land Use Policy 56, pages 209-216.
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George Holmes & Connor J. Cavanagh. (2016) A review of the social impacts of neoliberal conservation: Formations, inequalities, contestations. Geoforum 75, pages 199-209.
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Pádraig Carmody & David Taylor. (2016) Globalization, Land Grabbing, and the Present-Day Colonial State in Uganda. The Journal of Environment & Development 25:1, pages 100-126.
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Navé Wald & Douglas P. Hill. (2015) ‘Rescaling’ alternative food systems: from food security to food sovereignty. Agriculture and Human Values 33:1, pages 203-213.
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Peter Westoby & Kristen Lyons. (2016) ‘We would rather die in jail fighting for land, than die of hunger’: a Ugandan case study examining the deployment of corporate-led community development in the green economy. Community Development Journal 51:1, pages 60-76.
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Adrian Nel. (2015) The choreography of sacrifice: Market environmentalism, biopolitics and environmental damage. Geoforum 65, pages 246-254.
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Ivan R. Scales. (2014) Paying for nature: what every conservationist should know about political economy. Oryx 49:2, pages 226-231.
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Connor Joseph Cavanagh, Pål Olav Vedeld & Leif Tore Trædal. (2015) Securitizing REDD+? Problematizing the emerging illegal timber trade and forest carbon interface in East Africa. Geoforum 60, pages 72-82.
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Kristen Lyons & Peter Westoby. (2014) Carbon colonialism and the new land grab: Plantation forestry in Uganda and its livelihood impacts. Journal of Rural Studies 36, pages 13-21.
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Connor Cavanagh & Tor A. Benjaminsen. (2014) Virtual nature, violent accumulation: The ‘spectacular failure’ of carbon offsetting at a Ugandan National Park. Geoforum 56, pages 55-65.
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