Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T20:49:56.979Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

References

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 August 2019

Edward B. Barbier
Affiliation:
Colorado State University
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abdulai, A., Owusu, V. and Goetz, R.. 2011. “Land Tenure Differences and Investment in Land Improvement Measures: Theoretical and Empirical Analyses.” Journal of Development Economics 96: 6678.Google Scholar
Acemoglu, D., Johnson, S. and Robinson, J. A.. 2001. “The Colonial Origins of Comparative Development: An Empirical Investigation.” American Economic Review 91(5): 13691401.Google Scholar
Acharya, G. and Barbier, E.B.. 2000. “Valuing Groundwater Recharge through Agricultural Production in the Hadejia-Hguru Wetlands in Northern Nigeria.” Agricultural Economics 22: 247259.Google Scholar
Acharya, G. and Barbier, E.B.. 2002. “Using Domestic Water Analysis to Value an Environmental Function: Groundwater Recharge in the HadejiaJama’are Floodplain, Northern Nigeria.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 84(2): 415426.Google Scholar
Adams, W.M. 1992. Wasting the Rains: Rivers, People and Planning in Africa. Earthscan, London.Google Scholar
Adhikari, B. 2005. “Poverty, Property Rights, and Collective Action: Understanding the Distributive Aspects of Common Property Resource Management.” Environment and Development Economics 10(1): 731.Google Scholar
Adhikari, B., Di Falco, S. and Lovett, J.C.. 2004. “Household Characteristics and Forest Dependency: Evidence from Common Property Forest Management in Nepal.” Ecological Economics 48 : 245257.Google Scholar
Agarwala, M. and Ginsberg, J.R.. 2017. “Untangling Outcomes of De Jure and De Facto Community-Based Management Regimes of Natural Resources.” Conservation Biology 31(6): 12321246.Google Scholar
Agénor, P.-R. 2004. The Economics of Adjustment and Growth, 2nd ed. Academic Press, San Diego.Google Scholar
Agénor, P.-R. 2017. “Caught in the Middle? The Economics of Middle-Income Traps.” Journal of Economic Surveys 31(3): 771791.Google Scholar
Agergaard, J., Fold, N and Gough, K.. 2009. “Global–Local Interactions: Socioeconomic and Spatial Dynamics in Vietnam’s Coffee Frontier.” Geographical Journal 175: 133145.Google Scholar
Agrawal, A., Chhatre, A. and Hardin, R.. 2008. “Changing Governance of the World’s Forests.” Science 320(5882): 14601462.Google Scholar
Ahmed, A.U., Vargas Hill, R. and Naeem, F.. 2014. “The Poorest: Who and Where Are They?” In von Braun, J. and Gatzweiler, F. W. (eds.), Marginality: Addressing the Nexus of Poverty, Exclusion and Ecology. Springer, Berlin, pp. 8599.Google Scholar
Aidt, T., Dutta, J. and Sena, V.. 2008. “Governance Regimes, Corruption and Growth: Theory and Evidence.” Journal of Comparative Economics 36(2): 195220.Google Scholar
Alexeev, M. and Conrad, R.. 2009. “The Elusive Curse of Oil.” Review of Economics and Statistics 9(3): 586598.Google Scholar
Allan, J.A. 2003. “Virtual Water – The Water, Food, and Trade Nexus. Useful Concept or Misleading Metaphor?Water International 28(1): 106113.Google Scholar
Alston, L.J., Harris, E. and Mueller, B.. 2012. “The Development of Property Rights on Frontiers: Endowments, Norms, and Politics.” Journal of Economic History 72(3): 741770.Google Scholar
Alston, L.J., Libecap, G.D and Mueller, B.. 1999. Titles, Conflict, and Land Use: The Development of Property Rights and Land Reform on the Brazilian Amazon Frontier. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Alston, L.J., Libecap, G.D and Mueller, B.. 2000. “Land Reform Policies, the Sources of Violent Conflict, and Implications for Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 39(2): 162188.Google Scholar
Alston, L.J., Libecap, G.D. and Schneider, R.. 1996. “The Determinants and Impact of Property Rights: Land Titles on the Brazilian Frontier.” The Journal of Law, Economics and Organization 12(1): 2561.Google Scholar
Amacher, G.S., Koskela, E and Ollikainen, M.. 2008. “Deforestation and Land Use under Insecure Property Rights.” Environment and Development Economics 14: 281303.Google Scholar
Amacher, G.S., Ollikainen, M and Koskela, E.. 2009. Economics of Forest Resources. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Amin, S. 1974. Accumulation on a World Scale: A Critique of the Theory of Underdevelopment. Monthly Review Press, New York.Google Scholar
Andam, K.S., Ferraro, P.J., Sims, K.R.E., Healy, A. and Holland, M.B.. 2010. “Protected Areas Reduced Poverty in Costa Rica and Thailand.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107(22): 999710001Google Scholar
Anderson, L.E., Granger, C.W.J., Reis, J.R., Weihold, D. and Wunder, S., 2003. The Dynamics of Deforestation and Economic Growth in the Brazilian Amazon. Edward Elgar, London.Google Scholar
Anderson, T.L. and Hill, P.J.. 1975. “The Evolution of Property Rights: A Study of the American West.” The Journal of Law and Economics 18: 163179.Google Scholar
Anderson, T.L. and Hill, P.J.. 1990. “The Race for Property Rights.” The Journal of Law and Economics 33: 177197.Google Scholar
Andersson, K. and Agrawal, A.. 2011. “Inequalities, Institutions, and Forest Commons.” Global Environmental Change 21: 866875.Google Scholar
Andreoni, J.R. and Levinson, A.. 2001. “The Simple Analytics of the Environmental Kuznets Curve.” Journal of Public Economics 80: 269286.Google Scholar
Angelsen, A. 1999. “Agricultural Expansion and Deforestation: Modelling the Impact of Population, Market Forces and Property Rights.” Journal of Development Economics 58: 185218.Google Scholar
Angelsen, A. and Dokken, T.. 2018. “Climate Exposure, Vulnerability and Environmental Reliance: A Cross-Section Analysis of Structural and Stochastic Poverty.” Environment and Development Economics 23: 257278.Google Scholar
Angelsen, A. and Rudel, T.K.. 2013. “Designing and Implementing Effective REDD+ Policies: A Forest Transition Approach.” Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 7: 91113.Google Scholar
Angelsen, A., Jagger, P., Babigumira, R., Belcher, B., Hogarth, N.J., Bauch, S., Börner, J., Smith-Hall, C. and Wunder, S.. 2014. “Environmental Income and Rural Livelihoods: A Global-Comparative Analysis.” World Development 64: S12S26.Google Scholar
Ansoms, A. and McKay, A.. 2010. “A Quantitative Analysis of Poverty and Livelihood Profiles: The Case of Rural Rwanda.” Food Policy 35: 584598.Google Scholar
Ansuategi, A., Barbier, E.B. and Perrings, C.A.. 1998. “The Environmental Kuznets Curve.” In van den Bergh, J.C.J.M. and Hofkes, M.W. (eds.), Theory and Implementation of Economic Models for Sustainable Development. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, pp. 139164.Google Scholar
Antweiler, W., Copeland, B.R. and Taylor, M.S.. 2001. “Is Free Trade Good for the Environment?American Economic Review 91: 877908.Google Scholar
Arezki, R. and van der Ploeg, F.. 2011. “Do Natural Resources Depress Income per Capita?Review of Development Economics 15(3): 504521.Google Scholar
Arrow, K.J. 1962. “The Economic Implications of Learning by Doing.” Review of Economic Studies 29: 155173.Google Scholar
Arrow, K., Bolin, B., Costanza, R., Dasgupta, P., Folke, C., Holling, C.S., Jansson, B.-O., Levin, S., Mäler, K.-G., Perrings, C.A. and Pimentel, D.. 1995. “Economic Growth, Carrying Capacity, and the Environment.” Science 268: 520521.Google Scholar
Ascher, W. 1999. Why Governments Waste Natural Resources: Policy Failures in Developing Countries. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.Google Scholar
Asheim, G.B. 1986. “Hartwick’s Rule in Open Economies.” Canadian Journal of Economics 19: 395402.Google Scholar
Asheim, G.B. 1996. “Capital Gains and Net National Product in Open Economies.” Journal of Public Economics 59: 419434.Google Scholar
Astorga, P. 2010. “A Century of Growth in Latin America.” Journal of Development Economics 92: 232243.Google Scholar
Auty, R.M. 1993. Sustaining Development in Mineral Economies: The Resource Curse Thesis. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Auty, R.M. 1994. “Industrial Policy Reform in Six Large Newly Industrializing Countries: The Resource Curse Thesis.” World Development 22(1): 1126.Google Scholar
Auty, R.M. 2001. “The Political Economy of Resource-Driven Growth.” European Economic Review 45(4–6): 839846.Google Scholar
Auty, R.M. 2007. “Natural Resources, Capital Accumulation and the Resource Curse.” Ecological Economics 61: 27634.Google Scholar
Babigumira, B., Angelsen, A., Buis, M., Bauch, S., Sunderland, T. and Wunder, S.. 2014. “Forest Clearing in Rural Livelihoods: Household-Level Global-Comparative Evidence.” World Development 64: S67S79.Google Scholar
Badeeb, R.A., Lean, H.H. and Clark, J.. 2017. “The Evolution of the Natural Resource Curse Thesis: A Critical Literature Survey.” Resources Policy 51: 123134.Google Scholar
Baland, J.-M. and Francois, P.. 2000. “Rent-Seeking and Resource Booms.” Journal of Development Economics 61: 527542.Google Scholar
Baland, J.-M. and Platteau, J.-P.. 1996. Halting Degradation: Is there a Role for Rural Communities? Clarendon Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Baland, J.-M., Bardhan, P., Das, S. and Mookherjee, D.. 2010. “Forests to the People: Decentralization and Forest Degradation in the Indian Himalayas.” World Development 38(11): 16421656.Google Scholar
Banerjee, A.V. and Duflo, E.. 2007. “The Economic Lives of the Poor.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 21: 141168.Google Scholar
Banerjee, A.V. and Duflo, E.. 2010. “Giving Credit Where It Is Due.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 24(3): 6180.Google Scholar
Baran, P.A. 1957. The Political Economy of Growth. Monthly Review Press, New York.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 1989. Economics, Natural Resource Scarcity and Development: Conventional and Alternative Views. Earthscan Publications, London.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 1997a. “Introduction to the Environmental Kuznets Curve Special Issue.” Environment and Development Economics 2(4): 369382.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 1997b. “The Economic Determinants of Land Degradation in Developing Countries.” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Series B 352: 891899.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 1998. “Rural Poverty and Natural Resource Degradation.” In López, R. and Valdés, A. (eds.), Rural Poverty in Latin Amercia. The World Bank, Washington, DC, pp. 152184.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2001. “The Economics of Tropical Deforestation and Land Use: An Introduction to the Special Issue.” Land Economics 77: 155171.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2002. “Institutional Constraints and Deforestation: An Application to Mexico.” Economic Inquiry 40(3): 508519.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2003a. “The Role of Natural Resources in Economic Development.” Australian Economic Papers 42(2): 253272.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2003b. “Upstream Dams and Downstream Water Allocation – The Case of the Hadejia–Jama’are Floodplain, Northern Nigeria.” Water Resources Research 39(11): 13111319.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2004a. “Agricultural Expansion, Resource Booms and Growth in Latin America: Implications for Long-Run Economic Development.” World Development 32(1): 137157.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2004b. “Explaining Agricultural Land Expansion and Deforestation in Developing Countries.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 86(5): 13471353.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2004c. “Water and Economic Growth.” Economic Record 80: 116.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2005. “Frontier Expansion and Economic Development.” Contemporary Economic Policy 23(2): 286303.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2007. “Natural Capital and Labor Allocation: Mangrove-Dependent Households in Thailand.” Journal of Environment & Development 16(4): 398431.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2008. “In the Wake of the Tsunami: Lessons Learned from the Household Decision to Replant Mangroves in Thailand.” Resource and Energy Economics 30: 229249.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2010. “Poverty, Development and Environment.” Environment and Development Economics 15: 635660.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2011a. Capitalizing on Nature: Ecosystems as Natural Assets. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge and New York.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2011b. Scarcity and Frontiers: How Economies Have Developed Through Natural Resource Exploitation. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge and New York.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2012. “Progress and Challenges in Valuing Coastal and Marine Ecosystem Services.” Review of Environmental Economics & Policy 6(1): 119.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2013. “Wealth Accounting, Ecological Capital and Ecosystem Services.” Environment and Development Economics 18: 133161.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2014. “Structural Change, Marginal Land and Economic Development in Latin America and the Caribbean.” Latin America Economic Review 23: 229.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2015. “Water and Growth in Developing Countries.” In Dinar, Ariel and Schwabe, Kurt (eds.), Handbook of Water Economics. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, pp. 500512.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2016. “Sustainability and Development.” Annual Review of Resource Economics 8: 261280.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. 2019. “The Concept of Natural Capital.” Oxford Review of Economic Policy 35(1): 1436.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. and Burgess, J.C.. 1996. “Economic Analysis of Deforestation in Mexico.” Environment and Development Economics 1(2): 203240.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. and Burgess, J.C.. 1997. “The Economics of Tropical Forest Land Use Options.” Land Economics 73(2): 174195.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. and Burgess, J.C.. 2001a. “The Economics of Tropical Deforestation.” Journal of Economic Surveys 15(3): 413432.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. and Burgess, J.C.. 2001b. “Tropical Deforestation, Tenure Insecurity, and Unsustainability.” Forest Science 47(4): 497509.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. and Cox, M.. 2004. “An Economic Analysis of Shrimp Farm Expansion and Mangrove Conversion in Thailand.” Land Economics 80(3): 389407.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. and Hochard, J.P.. 2018a. “The Impacts of Climate Change on the Poor in Disadvantaged Regions.” Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 12: 2647.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. and Hochard, J.P.. 2018b. “Poverty, Rural Population Distribution and Climate Change.” Environment and Development Economics 23, Special Issue 3 (Poverty and Climate Change): 234256.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. and Markandya, A.. 2012. A New Blueprint for a Green Economy. Routledge/Taylor & Francis, London.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. and Sathirathai, S. (eds.). 2004. Shrimp Farming and Mangrove Loss in Thailand. Edward Elgar, London.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. and Tesfaw, A.T.. 2013. “Tenure Constraints and Carbon Forestry in Africa.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 95(4): 964975.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. and Tesfaw, A.T.. 2015. “Explaining Forest Transitions: The Role of Governance.” Ecological Economics 119: 252261.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B. and Thompson, J.R.. 1998. “The Value of Water: Floodplain versus Large-Scale Irrigation Benefits in Northern Nigeria.” Ambio 27(6): 434440.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B., Adams, W.M. and Kimmage, K.. 1993. “An Economic Valuation of Wetland Benefits.” In Hollis, G.E., Adams, W.M. and Aminu-Kano, M. (eds.), The Hadejia–Nguru Wetlands: Environment, Economy and Sustainable Development of a Sahelian Floodplain Wetland. IUCN, Geneva, pp. 191209.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B., Burgess, J.C. and Folke, C.. 1994. Paradise Lost? The Ecological Economics of Biodiversity Loss. Earthscan Publications, London.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B., Czajkowski, M. and Hanley, N.. 2017. “Is the income elasticity of the willingness to pay for pollution control constant?Environmental and Resource Economics 68: 663682.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B., López, R.E. and Hochard, J.P.. 2016. “Debt, Poverty and Resource Management in a Rural Smallholder Economy.” Environmental and Resource Economics 63: 411427.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B., Damania, R. and Léonard, D.. 2005. “Corruption, Trade and Resource Conversion.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 50: 276299.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B., Delacote, P. and Wolfersberger, J.. 2017. “The Economic Analysis of the Forest Transition: A Review.” Journal of Forest Economics 27: 1017.Google Scholar
Barbier, E.B., Strand, I. and Sathirathai, S.. 2002. “Do Open Access Conditions Affect the Valuation of an Externality? Estimating the Welfare Effects of Mangrove–Fishery Linkages in Thailand.” Environmental and Resource Economics 21(4): 343367.Google Scholar
Barney, K. 2009. “Laos and the Making of a ‘Relational’ Resource Ffrontier.” The Geographical Journal 175: 146159.Google Scholar
Barrett, C.B. 2008. “Smallholder Market Participation: Concepts and Evidence from Eastern and Southern Africa.” Food Policy 33: 299317.Google Scholar
Barrett, C.B. and Bevis, L.E.M.. 2015. “The Self-Reinforcing Feedback between Low Soil Fertility and Chronic Poverty.” Nature Geoscience 8: 907912.Google Scholar
Barrett, C.B. and Carter, M.R.. 2013. “The Economics of Poverty Traps and Persistent Poverty: Empirical and Policy Implications.” Journal of Development Studies 49(7): 976990.Google Scholar
Barrett, C.B., Reardon, T. and Webb, P.. 2001. “Nonfarm Income Diversification and Household Livelihood Strategies in Rural Africa: Concepts, Dynamics and Policy Implications.” Food Policy 26: 315331.Google Scholar
Barrett, C.B., Garg, T. and McBride, L.. 2016. “Well-Being Dynamics and Poverty Traps.” Annual Review of Resource Economics 8: 303327.Google Scholar
Barro, R.J. 1990. “Government Spending in a Simple Model of Endogenous Growth.” Journal of Political Economy 98(5): S103S124.Google Scholar
Barro, R.J. 2003. “Determinants of Economic Growth in a Panel of Countries.” Annals of Economics and Finance 4: 231274.Google Scholar
Barro, R.J. and Sala-I-Martin, X.. 1992. “Public Finance in Models of Economic Growth.” Review of Economic Studies 59: 645661.Google Scholar
Barro, R.J. and Sala-I-Martin, X.. 2004. Economic Growth, 2nd ed. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Battacharya, H. and Innes, R.. 2013. “Income and the Environment in Rural India: Is There a Poverty Trap?American Journal of Agricultural Economics 95(1): 4269.Google Scholar
Beckerman, W.A. 1992. “Economic Growth and the Environment: Whose Growth? Whose Environment?World Development 20: 481496.Google Scholar
Bellemare, M.F. 2012. “Insecure Land Rights and Share Tenancy: Evidence from Madagascar.” Land Economics 88(1): 155180.Google Scholar
Bellemare, M.F. 2013. “The Productivity Impacts of Formal and Informal Land Rights: Evidence from Madagascar.” Land Economics 89(2): 272290.Google Scholar
Bellon, M.R., Hodson, D., Bergvinson, D., Beck, D., Martinez-Romero, E. and Montoya, Y.. 2005. “Targeting Agricultural Research to Benefit Poor Farmers: Relating Poverty Mapping to Maize Environments in Mexico.” Food Policy 30: 476492.Google Scholar
Bellwood, P. 2005. First Farmers: The Origins of Agricultural Societies. Blackwell Publishing, Oxford.Google Scholar
Béné, C. 2009. “Are Fishers Poor or Vulnerable? Assessing Economic Vulnerability in Small-Scale Fishing Communities.” Journal of Development Studies 45: 911933.Google Scholar
Benhin, J.K.A. and Barbier, E.B.. 2001. “The Effects of the Structural Adjustment Program on Deforestation in Ghana.” Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 30(1): 6680.Google Scholar
Besley, T. 1995. “Property Rights and Investment Incentives: Theory and Evidence from Ghana.” Journal of Political Economy 103(5): 903937.Google Scholar
Bhattarai, M. and Hammig, M.. 2004. “Governance, Economic Policy, and the Environmental Kuznets Curve for Deforestation.” Environment and Development Economics 30(3): 367382.Google Scholar
Binswanger, H.P. and Deininger, K.. 1997. “Explaining Agricultural and Agrarian Policies in Developing Countries.” Journal of Economic Literature 35: 19582005.Google Scholar
Binswanger, H.P. and Sillers, D.A.. 1983. “Risk Aversion and Credit Constraints in Farmers’ Decisionmaking: A Reinterpretation.” Journal of Development Studies 22: 504539.Google Scholar
Bishop, R.C. 1993. “Economic Efficiency, Sustainability and Biodiversity.” Ambio 22(2–3): 6973.Google Scholar
Bleany, M. and Greenaway, D.. 1993. “Long-Run Trends in the Relative Price of Primary Commodities and in the Terms of Trade of Developing Countries.” Oxford Economic Papers 45: 349363.Google Scholar
Bloom, D.E. and Sachs, J.D.. 1998. “Geography, Demography, and Economic Growth in Africa.” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 1998(2): 207273.Google Scholar
Bluffstone, R.A. 1995. “The Effect of Labor Market Performance on Deforestation in Developing Countries under Open Access: An Example from Rural Nepal.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 29: 4263.Google Scholar
Bohn, H. and Deacon, R.T.. 2000. “Ownership Risk, Investment, and the Use of Natural Resources.” American Economic Review 90(3): 526549.Google Scholar
Bolte, K., Matete, M. and Clemens, M.. 2002. Manual for Calculating Adjusted Savings. Environment Department, The World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Boschini, A.D., Pettersson, J. and Roine, J.. 2007. “Resource Curse or Not: A Question of Appropriatbility.” Scandinavian Journal of Economics 109(3): 593617.Google Scholar
Boschini, A.D., Pettersson, J. and Roine, J.. 2013. “The Resource Curse and its Potential Reversal.” World Development 43: 1941.Google Scholar
Boserup, E. 1965. The Conditions of Agricultural Growth: The Economics of Agrarian Change under Population Pressure. Allen & Unwin, London.Google Scholar
Boucher, S. and Guirkinger, C.. 2007. “Risk, Wealth, and Sectoral Choice in Rural Credit Markets.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 89(4): 9911004.Google Scholar
Bova, E., Medas, P. and Poghosyan, T.. 2016. Macroeconomic Stability in Resource-Rich Countries: The Role of Fiscal Policy. IMF Working Papers WP/16/36. International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Boyce, J.R. and Emery, J.C.H.. 2011. “Is a Negative Correlation between Resource Abundance and Growth Sufficient Evidence that There Is a ‘Resource Curse’?Resources Policy 36(1): 113.Google Scholar
Brander, J.A. and Taylor, M.S.. 1997. “International Trade and Open-Access Renewable Resources: The Small Open Economy.” Canadian Journal of Economics 30(3): 526552.Google Scholar
Brander, J.A. and Taylor, M.S.. 1998a. “Open Access Renewable Resources: Trade and Trade Policy in a Two-Country Model.” Journal of International Economics 44: 181209.Google Scholar
Brander, J.A. and Taylor, M.S.. 1998b. “The Simple Economics of Easter Island: A Ricardo–Malthus Model of Renewable Resource Use.” American Economic Review 88: 119138.Google Scholar
Brasselle, A.-S., Gaspart, F and Platteau, J.-P.. 2002. “Land Tenure Security and Investment Incentives: Puzzling Evidence from Burkina Faso.” Journal of Development Economics 69(2): 373418.Google Scholar
Bridge, G. 2008. “Global Production Networks and the Extractive Sector: Governing Resource-Based DevelopmentJournal of Economic Geography 8: 389419.Google Scholar
Briscoe, J. 1996. “Managing Water as an Economic Good: Rules for Reformers.” Water Supply 15(4): 153172.Google Scholar
Bromley, D.W. 1989. “Property Relations and Economic Development: The Other Land Reform.” World Development 17: 867877.Google Scholar
Bromley, D.W. 1991. Environment and Economy: Property Rights and Public Policy. Basil Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Bromley, D.W. 2008. “Resource Degradation in the African Commons: Accounting for Institutional Decay.” Environment and Development Economics 13(5): 539563.Google Scholar
Browder, J., Pedlowski, M., Walker, R., Wynne, R., Summers, P., Abad, A., Becerra-Cordoba, N. and Mil-Homens, J.. 2008. “Revisiting Theories of Frontier Expansion in the Brazilian Amazon: A Survey of Colonist Farming Population in Rondônia’s Post-Frontier, 1992–2002.” World Development 36: 14691492.Google Scholar
Brown, K. and Pearce, D.W. (eds.). 1994. The Causes of Tropical Deforestation: The Economic and Statistical Analysis of Factors Giving Rise to the Loss of the Tropical Forests. University College London Press, London.Google Scholar
Brunnschweiler, C.N. and Bulte, E.H.. 2008. “The Resource Curse Revisited and Revised: A Tale of Paradoxes and Red Herrings.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 55: 248264.Google Scholar
Bulte, E.H. and Barbier, E.B.. 2005. “Trade and Renewable Resources in a Second Best World: An Overview.” Environmental and Resource Economics 30: 423463.Google Scholar
Bulte, E.H., Damania, R. and Deacon, R.T.. 2005. “Resource Intensity, Institutions, and Development.” World Development 33(7): 10291044.Google Scholar
Burger, J., Ostrom, E., Norgaard, R.B., Policansky, D. and Goldstein, B.D. (eds.). 2001. Protecting the Commons: A Framework for Resource Management in the Americas. Island Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Burgstaller, A. and Saavedra-Rivano, N.. 1984. “Capital Mobility and Growth in a North–South Model.” Journal of Development Economics 15: 213237.Google Scholar
Busch, J. and Ferretti-Gallon, K.. 2017. “What Drives Deforestation and What Stops It? A Meta-Analysis.” Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 11(1): 323.Google Scholar
Busch, J., Ferretti-Gallon, K., Engelmann, J., Wright, M., Austin, K.G., Stolle, F., Turubanova, S., Potapov, P.V., Margona, B., Hansen, M.C. and Baccini, A.. 2015. “Reductions in Emissions from Deforestation from Indonesia’s Moratorium on New Oil Palm, Timber, and Logging Concessions.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112: 13281333.Google Scholar
Cardoso da Silva, J.M., Prasad, S and Felizola Diniz-Filho, J.A.. 2017. “The Impact of Deforestation, Urbanization, Public Investment, and Agriculture on Human Welfare in the Brazilian Amazon.” Land Use Policy 65: 135142.Google Scholar
Carr, D. 2009. “Population and Deforestation: Why Rural Migration Matters.” Progress in Human Geography 33: 355378.Google Scholar
Carrasco, L.R., Nghiem, T.P.L., Chen, Z. and Barbier, E.B.. 2017. “Unsustainable Development Pathways Caused by Tropical Deforestation.” Science Advances 3(7): e1602602.Google Scholar
Carson, R.T. 2010. “The Environmental Kuznets Curve: Seeking Empirical Regularity and Theoretical Structure.” Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 4(1): 323.Google Scholar
Carter, M.R. and Barrett, C.B.. 2006. “The Economics of Poverty Traps and Persistent Poverty: An Asset-Based Approach.” Journal of Development Studies 42(2): 178199.Google Scholar
Carter, M.R., Little, P.D., Mogues, T. and Negatu, W.. 2007. “Poverty Traps and Natural Disasters in Ethiopia and Honduras.” World Development 35: 835856.Google Scholar
Castañeda, A., Doan, D., Newhouse, D., Nguyen, M.C., Uematsu, H., Azvedo, J.P. and World Bank Data for Goals Group. 2018. “A New Profile of the Global Poor.” World Development 101: 250267.Google Scholar
Cattaneo, A. 2001. “Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon: Comparing the Impacts of Macroeconomic Shocks, Land Tenure, and Technological Change.” Land Economics 77(2): 219240.Google Scholar
Caviglia-Harris, J.L. 2004. “Household Production and Forest Clearing: The Role of Farming in the Development of the Amazon.” Environment and Development Economics 9: 181202.Google Scholar
Caviglia-Harris, J.L. and Harris, D.. 2008. “Integrating Survey and Remote Sensing Data to Analyze Land Use Scale: Insights from Agricultural Households in the Brazilian Amazon.” International Regional Science Review 31:115137.Google Scholar
Caviglia-Harris, J.L. and Sills, E.O.. 2005. “Land Use and Income Diversification: Comparing Traditional and Colonist Populations in the Brazilian Amazon.” Agricultural Economics 32: 221237.Google Scholar
Caviglia-Harris, J.L., Sills, E.O. and Mullan, K.. 2013. “Migration and Mobility on the Amazon Frontier.” Population and Environment 34: 338369.Google Scholar
Caviglia-Harris, J.L., Sills, E.O., Bell, A., Harris, D., Mullan, K. and Roberts, D.. 2016. “Busting the Boom–Bust Pattern of Development in the Brazilian Amazon.” World Development 79: 8296.Google Scholar
Celentano, D., Sills, E., Sales, M. and Veríssimo, A., A. 2012. “Welfare Outcomes and the Advance of the Deforestation Frontier in the Brazilian Amazon.” World Development 40: 850864.Google Scholar
CGIAR (TAC Secretariat). 1999. CGIAR Study on Marginal Lands: Report on the Study on CGIAR Research Priority for Marginal Lands. Marginal Lands Study Paper No. 1. Rome: Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations.Google Scholar
Chambers, E.J. and Gordon, D.F.. 1966. “Primary Products and Economic Growth: An Empirical Measurement.” Journal of Political Economy 74(4): 315332.Google Scholar
Chaves, R.A. and Sánchez, S.M.. 1998. “Poverty, Entrepreneurs and Financial Markets in the Rural Areas of Mexico.” In López, R. and Valdés, A. (eds.), Rural Poverty in Latin America. The World Bank, Washington, DC, pp. 120151.Google Scholar
Chew, S.C. 2001. World Ecological Degradation: Accumulation, Urbanization, and Deforestation 3000 BC–AD 2000. Altamira Press, New York.Google Scholar
Chichilnisky, G. 1994. “North–South Trade and the Global Environment.” American Economic Review 84: 851874.Google Scholar
Chomitz, K.M. and Gray, D.A.. 1996. “Roads, Land Markets and Deforestation: A Spatial Model of Land Use in Belize.” The World Bank Economic Review 10(3): 487512.Google Scholar
Chomitz, K.M., Buys, P., De Luca, G., Thomas, T.S. and Wertz-Kanounnikoff, S.. 2007. At Loggerheads? Agricultural Expansion, Poverty Reduction, and Environment in the Tropical Forests. The World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Choumert, J., Motel, P.C. and Dakpo, H.K.. 2013. “Is the Environmental Kuznets Curve for Deforestation a Threatened Theory? A Meta-Analysis of the Literature.” Ecological Economics 90: 1928.Google Scholar
Cipolla, C.M. 1962. The Economic History of World Population. Penguin Books, Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
Cipolla, C.M. 1976. Before the Industrial Revolution: European Society and Economy, 1000–1700. Methuen, London.Google Scholar
Coady, D., Grosh, M. and Hoddinott, J.. 2004. “Targeting Outcomes Redux.” World Bank Research Observer 19(1): 6185.Google Scholar
Cole, M.A. 2003. “Development, Trade, and the Environment: How Robust Is the Environmental Kuznets Curve?Environment and Development Economics 8(4): 557581.Google Scholar
Cole, M.A., Rayner, A.J. and Bates, J.M.. 1997. “The Environmental Kuznets Curve: An Empirical Analysis.” Environment and Development Economics 2(4): 401416.Google Scholar
Cooke, P.A. 1998. “The Effect of Environmental Good Scarcity on Own-Farm Labor Allocation: The Case of Agricultural Households in Rural Nepal.” Environment and Development Economics 3(4): 443470.Google Scholar
Comprehensive Assessment of Water Management in Agriculture (CAWMA). 2008. Water for Food, Water for Life: A Comprehensive Assessment of Water Management in Agriculture. Earthscan, London, and International Water Management Institute, Colombo.Google Scholar
Coomes, O.T., Takasaki, Y. and Rhemtulla, J.M.. 2011. “Land-Use Poverty Traps Identified in Shifting Cultivation Systems Shape Long-Term Tropical Forest Cover.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108: 1392513930.Google Scholar
Corden, W.M. 1984. “Booming Sector and Dutch Disease Economics: Survey and Consolidation.” Oxford Economic Papers 36: 359380.Google Scholar
Cosgrove, W.J. and Rijsberman, F.R.. 2000. World Water Vision: Making Water Everybody’s Business. World Water Council and Earthscan Publications, London.Google Scholar
Coxhead, I. and Jayasuriya, S.. 1995. “Trade and Tax Policy Reform and the Environment: The Economics of Soil Erosion in Developing Countries.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 77: 631644.Google Scholar
Coxhead, I. and Jayasuriya, S.. 2003. The Open Economy and the Environment: Development, Trade and Resources in Asia. Edward Elgar, Northampton, MA.Google Scholar
Coxhead, I., Rola, A. and Kim, K.. 2001. “How Do National Markets and Price Policies Affect Land Use at the Forest Margin? Evidence from the Philipines.” Land Economics 77(2): 250267.Google Scholar
Coxhead, I., Shively, G.E. and Shuai, X.. 2002. “Development Policies, Resource Constraints, and Agricultural Expansion on the Philippine Land Frontier.” Environment and Development Economics 7: 341364.Google Scholar
Cramb, R. and Curry, G.N.. 2012. “Oil Palm and Rural Livelihoods in the Asia-Pacific Region: An Overview.” Asia Pacific Viewpoint 53: 223239.Google Scholar
Cropper, M., Griffiths, C. and Mani, M.. 1999. “Roads, Population Pressures, and Deforestation in Thailand, 1976–1989.” Land Economics 75(1): 5873.Google Scholar
Cropper, M. and Griffiths, C.. 1994. “The Interaction of Population Growth and Environmental Quality.” American Economic Review 84(2): 250254.Google Scholar
Cropper, M., Puri, J. and Griffiths, C.. 2001. “Predicting the Location of Deforestation: The Role of Roads and Protected Areas in Northern Thailand.” Land Economics 77(2): 172186.Google Scholar
Crosby, A. 1986. Ecological Imperialism: The Biological Expansion of Europe 900–1900. Cambridge University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Culas, R.J. 2007. “Deforestation and the Environmental Kuznets Curve: An Institutional Perspective.” Ecological Economics 61(2–3): 429437.Google Scholar
Culas, R.J. 2012. “REDD and Forest Transition: Tunneling through the Environmental Kuznets Curve.” Ecological Economics 79: 4451.Google Scholar
Cunguara, B. and Darnhofer, I.. 2011. “Assessing the Impact of Improved Agricultural Technologies on Household Income in Rural Mozambique.” Food Policy 36: 378390.Google Scholar
Curry, G.N. and Koczberski, G.. 2009. “Finding Common Ground: Relational Concepts of Land Tenure and Economy in the Oil Palm Frontier of Papua New Guinea.” The Geographical Journal 175: 98111.Google Scholar
Daniele, V. 2011. “Natural Resources and the ‘Quality’ of Economic Development.” Journal of Development Studies 47(4): 545573.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, P. 1993. An Inquiry into Well-Being and Destitution. Oxford University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, P.S. and Heal, G.. 1974. “The Optimal Depletion of Exhaustible Resources.” Review of Economic Studies 41(Symposium Issue): 328.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, P.S. and Heal, G.. 1979. The Economics of Exhaustible Resources. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, P.S. and Mäler, K.-G.. 1991. “The Environment and Emerging Development Issues.” In Proceedings of the Annual World Bank Conference on Development Economics 1990. The World Bank, Washington, DC, pp. 101132.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, P.S. and Mäler, K.-G.. 2000. “Net National Product, Wealth and Social Well-Being.” Environment and Development Economics 5(1–2): 6994.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, S., Laplante, B., Wang, H. and Wheeler, D.. 2002. “Confronting the Environmental Kuznets Curve.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 16: 147168.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, S., Huq, M., Mustafa, M.G., Sobhan, M.I. and Wheeler, D.. 2017. “The Impact of Aquatic Salinization on Fish Habitats and Poor Communities in a Changing Climate: Evidence from Southwest Coastal Bangladesh.” Ecological Economics 139: 128139.Google Scholar
David, P.A. and Wright, G.. 1997. “Increasing Returns and the Genesis of American Resource Abundance.” Industrial and Corporate Change 6: 203245.Google Scholar
Davies, R., Rattsø, J. and Torvik, R.. 1994. “The Macroeconomics of Zimbabwe in the 1980s: A CGE-Model Analysis.” Journal of African Economies 3: 153198.Google Scholar
Davis, G.A. 1995. “Learning to Love the Dutch Disease: Evidence from the Mineral Economies.” World Development 23(1): 17651779.Google Scholar
Davis, G.A. 1998. “The Minerals Sector, Sectoral Analysis, and Economic Development.” Resources Policy 24(4): 217228.Google Scholar
Davis, G.A. 2011. “The resource drag.” International Economics and Economic Policy 8: 155176.Google Scholar
de Bruyn, S. 1997. “Explaining the Environmental Kuznets Curve: Structural Change and International Agreements in Reducing Sulphur Emissions.” Environment and Development Economics 2(4): 484504.Google Scholar
De Groot, H.L., Withagen, C.A. and Minliang, Z.. 2004. “Dynamics of China’s Regional Development and Pollution: An Investigation into the Environmental Kuznets Curve.” Environment and Development Economics 9(4): 507538.Google Scholar
de Sherbinin, A. 2008. “Is Poverty More Acute Near Parks? An Assessment of Infant Mortality Rates around Protected Areas in Developing Countries.” Oryx 42: 2635.Google Scholar
Deacon, R.T. 1994. “Deforestation and Ownership: Evidence from Historical Accounts and Contemporary Data.” Land Economics 75(3): 341359.Google Scholar
DeFries, R., Rudel, T., Uriarte, M. and Hansen, M. 2010. “Deforestation Driven by Urban Population Growth and Agricultural Trade in the Twenty-First Century.” Nature Geoscience 3: 178801.Google Scholar
Debela, B., Shively, G., Angelsen, A. and Wik, M.. 2012. “Economic Shocks, Diversification, and Forest Use in Uganda.” Land Economics 88: 139154.Google Scholar
Deininger, K. and Byerlee, D.. 2012. “The Rise of Large Farms in Land Abundant Countries: Do They Have a Future?World Development 40: 701714.Google Scholar
Deininger, K. and Jin, S.. 2006. “Tenure Security and Land-Related Investment: Evidence from Ethiopia.” European Economic Review 50(5): 12451277.Google Scholar
Deininger, K.W. and Minten, B.. 1999. “Poverty, Policies and Deforestation: The Case of Mexico.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 47(2): 313344.Google Scholar
Delacote, P. 2007. “Agricultural Expansion, Forest Products as Safety Nets, and Deforestation.” Environment and Development Economics 12: 235249.Google Scholar
Delacote, P. 2009. “Commons as Insurance: Safety Nets or Poverty Traps?Environment and Development Economics 14: 305322.Google Scholar
Dercon, S. 1998. “Wealth, Risk and Activity Choice: Cattle in Western Tanzania.” Journal of Development Economics 55: 142.Google Scholar
Dercon, S., Gilligan, D.O., Hoddinott, J and Woldehanna, T.. 2009. “The Impact of Agricultural Extension and Roads on Poverty and Consumption Growth in Fifteen Ethiopian Villages.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 91: 10071021.Google Scholar
di Tella, G. 1982. “The Economics of the Frontier.” In Kindleberger, C.P. and di Tella, G. (eds.), Economics in the Long View. Macmillan, London, pp. 210227.Google Scholar
Diamond, J. 1999. Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies. W. W. Norton & Co., New York.Google Scholar
Dillon, A., Sharma, M. and Zhang, X.. 2011. “Estimating the Impact of Rural Investments in Nepal.” Food Policy 36: 250258.Google Scholar
Dinar, A., Dinar, S., McCaffrey, S. and McKinney, D.. 2007. Bridges over Water: Understanding Transboundary Water Conflict, Negotiation and Cooperation. World Scientific, Singapore.Google Scholar
Dinar, S., Dinar, A. and Kurukulasuriya, P.. 2011. “Scarcity and Cooperation along International Rivers: An Empirical Assessment of Bilateral Treaties.” International Studies Quarterly 55: 809833.Google Scholar
Dixit, A.P., Hammond, P. and Hoel, M.. 1980. “On Hartwick’s Rule for Regular Maxmin Paths of Capital Accumulation and Resource Depletion.” Review of Economic Studies 47: 551556.Google Scholar
Dixon, R. and Thirwall, A.P.. 1975. “A Model of Regional Growth Rate Differences on Kaldorian Lines.” Oxford Economic Papers 27: 201214.Google Scholar
Domar, E.D. 1970. “The Causes of Slavery or Serfdom: A Hypothesis.” Journal of Economic History 30(1): 1832.Google Scholar
Dosi, C. and Easter, W.K.. 2003. “Water Scarcity: Market Failure and the Implications for Water Markets and Privatization.” International Journal of Public Administration 26(3): 265290.Google Scholar
Durlauf, S.N., Johnson, P.A. and Temple, J.R.W.. 2005. “Growth econometrics.” In Aghion, Philippe and Durlauf, Steven N. (eds.), Handbook of Economic Growth, Vol. 1B, Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 555677.Google Scholar
Easterly, W. 2001. The Elusive Quest for Growth: Economists’ Adventures and Misadventures in the Tropics. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Easterly, W. 2007. “Inequality Does Cause Underdevelopment: Insights from a New Instrument.” Journal of Development Economics 84: 755776.Google Scholar
Easterly, W. 2008. “Institutions: Top Down or Bottom Up?American Economic Review 98(2): 9599.Google Scholar
Easterly, W. and Levine, R.. 2003. “Tropics, Germs and Crops: How Endowments Influence Economic Development.” Journal of Monetary Economics 50: 339.Google Scholar
Ehui, S.K. and Hertel, T.W.. 1989. “Deforestation and Agricultural Productivity in the Côte d’Ivoire.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 71: 703711.Google Scholar
Ehui, S.K., Hertel, T.W. and Preckel, P.V.. 1990. “Forest Resource Depletion, Soil Dynamics, and Agricultural Productivity in the Tropics.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 18: 136154.Google Scholar
El Khanji, S. and Hudson, J.. 2016. “Water Utilization and Water Quality in Endogenous Economic Growth.” Environment and Development Economics 21: 626648.Google Scholar
Elbers, C., Fujii, T., Lanjouw, P., Özler, B. and Yin, W.. 2007. “Poverty Alleviation through Geographic Targeting: How Much Does Disaggregation Help?Journal of Development Economics 83: 198213.Google Scholar
Emmanuel, A. 1972. Unequal Exchange: A Study in the Imperialism of Trade. Monthly Review Press, New York.Google Scholar
Emran, M.S. and Hou, Z.. 2013. “Access to Markets and Rural Poverty: Evidence from Household Consumption in China.” Review of Economics and Statistics 95: 682697.Google Scholar
Engerman, S.L. 2003. “Comment on: Tropics, Germs and Crops: How Endowments Influence Economic Development.” Journal of Monetary Economics 50: 4147.Google Scholar
Engerman, S.L. and Sokoloff, K.L.. 1997. “Factor Endowments, Institutions, and Differential Paths of Growth among New World Economies.” In Haber, S. (ed.), How Latin America Fell Behind: Essays on the Economic Histories of Brazil and Mexico. Stanford University Press, Stanford, pp. 260304.Google Scholar
Eskander, S.M. and Barbier, E.B.. 2017. “Tenure Security, Human Capital and Soil Conservation in an Overlapping Generation Rural Economy.” Ecological Economics 135: 176185.Google Scholar
Eskander, S.M., Barbier, E.B. and Gilbert, B.. 2018. “Fishing and Non-Fishing Income Decisions: The Role of Human Capital and Family Structure.” Land Economics 94(1):114136.Google Scholar
Ewers, R.M. 2006. “Interaction Effects between Economic Development and Forest Cover Change Determine Deforestation Rates.” Global Environmental Change 16: 161169.Google Scholar
Fan, S. and Chan-Kang, C.. 2004. “Returns to Investment in Less-Favoured Areas in Developing Countries: A Synthesis of Evidence and Implications for Africa.” Food Policy 29: 431444.Google Scholar
Fan, S. and Hazell, P.. 2001. “Returns to Public Investment in the Less-Favored Areas of India and China.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 83: 12171222.Google Scholar
Feder, G. 1985. “The Relation between Farm Size and Farm Productivity: The Role of Family Labor, Supervision and Credit Constraints.” Journal of Development Economics 18: 297313.Google Scholar
Feder, G. and Feeny, D.. 1991. “Land Tenure and Property Rights: Theory and Implications for Development Policy.” World Bank Economic Review 5(1): 135153.Google Scholar
Feder, G. and Noronha, R.. 1987. “Land Rights Systems and Agricultural Development in Sub-Saharan Africa.” World Bank Research Observer 2: 143169.Google Scholar
Feder, G. and Onchan, T.. 1987. “Land Ownership Security and Farm Investment in Thailand.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 69(2): 311320.Google Scholar
Feder, G., Onchan, T., Chalamwong, Y. and Hongladarom, C.. 1988. “Land Policies and Farm Performance in Thailand’s Forest Reserve Areas.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 36(3): 483501.Google Scholar
Feeny, D. 2002. “The Co-evolution of Property Rights Regimes for Man, Land, and Forests in Thailand, 1790–1990.” In Richards, J.F. (ed.), Land Property and the Environment. Institute for Contemporary Studies Press, San Francisco, pp. 179221.Google Scholar
Fernandez, L. 2006. “Natural Resources, Agriculture and Property Rights.” Ecological Economics 57: 359373.Google Scholar
Findlay, R. 1980. “The Terms of Trade and Equilibrium Growth in the World Economy.American Economic Review 70: 291299.Google Scholar
Findlay, R. 1992. “The Roots of Divergence: Western Economic History in Comparative Perspective.” American Economic Review 82(2): 158161.Google Scholar
Findlay, R. 1993. “The ‘Triangular Trade’ and the Atlantic Economy of the Eighteenth Century: A Simple General-Equilibrium Model.” In Findlay, R. (ed.), Trade, Development and Political Economy: Essays of Ronald Findlay. Edward Elgar, London, pp. 321351.Google Scholar
Findlay, R. 1995. Factor Proportions, Trade, and Growth. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Findlay, R. 1998. “The Emergence of the World Economy.” In Cohen, Daniel (ed.), Contemporary Economic Issues: Proceedings of the Eleventh World Congress of the International Economics Association, Tunis. Volume 3. Trade Payments and Debt. St Martin’s Press, New York, pp. 82122.Google Scholar
Findlay, R. and Lundahl, M.. 1994. “Natural Resources, ‘Vent-for-Surplus,’ and the Staples Theory.” In Meier, G. (ed.), From Classical Economics to Development Economics: Essays in Honor of Hla Myint. St. Martin’s Press, New York, pp. 6893.Google Scholar
Findlay, R. and Lundahl, M.. 2017. “Resource-Led Growth – A Long-Term Perspective: The Relevance of the 1870–1914 Experience for Today’s Developing Economies.” In Findlay, R. and Lundahl, M. (eds.), The Economics of the Frontier: Conquest and Settlement. Palgrave MacMillan, London, pp. 315366.Google Scholar
Findlay, R. and O’Rourke, K.H.. 2007. Power and Plenty: Trade, War, and the World Economy in the Second Millennium. Princeton University Press, Princeton.Google Scholar
Findlay, R. and Wellisz, S. (eds.). 1993. The Political Economy of Poverty, Equity and Growth: Five Small Open Economies. A World Bank Comparative Study. Oxford University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Fisher, M. 2004. “Household Welfare and Forest Dependence in Southern Malawi.” Environment and Development Economics 9: 135154.Google Scholar
Fisher, M.M., Shively, G.E. and Buccola, S.. 2005. “Activity Choice, Labor Allocation, and Forest Use in Malawi.” Land Economics 81(4): 503517.Google Scholar
Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO). 2012. Coping with Water Scarcity: An Action Framework for Agriculture and Food Security. FAO Water Report 38. FAO, Rome.Google Scholar
Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO). 2015. Global Forest Resources Assessment 2015. FAO, Rome.Google Scholar
Foster, A.D. and Rosenzweig, M.R. 2003. “Economic Growth and the Rise of Forests.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 118: 601637.Google Scholar
Frank, A.G. 1967. Capitalism and Underdevelopment in Latin America: Historical Studies of Chile and Brazil. Monthly Review Press, New York.Google Scholar
Frank, A.G. 1978. Dependent Accumulation and Development. Macmillan, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fritzell, J., Rehnberg, J., Hertzman, J.B. and Blomgren, J.. 2015. “Absolute or Relative? A Comparative Analysis between Poverty and Mortality.” International Journal of Public Health 60: 101110.Google Scholar
Furtado, C. 1970. Economic Development of Latin America: A Survey from Colonial Times to the Cuban Revolution. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Futagami, K., Morita, Y. and Shibata, A.. 1993. “Dynamic Analysis of an Endogenous Growth Model with Public Capital.” In Andersen, T. and Moene, K. (eds.), Endogenous Growth. Basil Blackwell, Oxford, pp. 217235.Google Scholar
Galor, O. and Weil, D.N.. 1998. “From Malthusian Stagnation to Modern Growth.” American Economic Review 89(2): 150154.Google Scholar
Garrett, R.D., Lambin, E.F. and Naylor, R.. 2013a. “Land Institutions and Supply Chain Configurations as Determinants of Soybean Planted Area and Yields in Brazil.” Land Use Policy 31: 385396.Google Scholar
Garrett, R.D., Lambin, E.F. and Naylor, R.. 2013b. “The New Economic Geography of Land Use Change: Supply Chain Configurations and Land Use in the Brazilian Amazon.” Land Use Policy 34: 265275.Google Scholar
Garrett, R.D., Gardner, T.A., Fonseca, T., Marchand, S., Barlow, J., Ezzine de Blas, D., Ferreira, J., , A.C. Lees and Parry, L.. 2017. “Explaining the Persistence of Low Income and Environmentally Degrading Land Ises in the Brazilian Amazon.” Ecology and Society 22: 27.Google Scholar
Gelb, A. and associates. 1988. Oil Windfalls: Blessing or Curse? Oxford University Press for the World Bank, New York.Google Scholar
Gerber, N., Nkonya, E. and von Braun, J.. 2014. “Land Degradation, Poverty and Marginality.” In von Braun, J. and Gatzweiler, F.W. (eds.), Marginality: Addressing the Nexus of Poverty, Exclusion and Ecology. Springer, Berlin, pp. 181202.Google Scholar
Ghatak, M. 2015. “Theories of Poverty Traps and Anti-Poverty Policies.” World Bank Economic Review 29(Suppl. 1): S77–S105.Google Scholar
Gibbs, H.K., Ruesch, A.S., Achard, F., Clayton, M.K., Holmgren, P., Ramankutty, N. and Foley, J.A.. 2010. “Tropical Forests Were the Primary Sources of New Agricultural Lands in the 1980s and 1990s.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107: 1673216737.Google Scholar
Gibson, C.C. 2001. “Forest Resources: Institutions for Local Governance in Guatemala.” In Burger, J., Ostrom, E., Norgaard, R.B., Policansky, D. and Goldstein, B.D. (eds.), Protecting the Commons: A Framework for Resource Management in the Americas. Island Press, Washington, DC, pp. 7190.Google Scholar
Gleick, P.H. 2000. The World’s Water 2000–2001: The Biennial Report on Freshwater Resources. Island Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Godoy, R., Jacobson, M., De Castro, J., Aliaga, V., Romero, J. and Davis, A.. 1998. “The Role of Tenure Security and Private Preference in Neotropical Deforestation.” Land Economics 74(2): 162170.Google Scholar
Gollin, D. and Rogerson, R.. 2014. “Productivity, Transport Costs and Subsistence Agriculture.” Journal of Development Economics 107: 3848.Google Scholar
González-Vega, C., Rodríguez-Meza, J., Southgate, D. and Maldonado, J.H.. 2004. “Poverty, Structural Transformation, and Land Use in El Salvador: Learning from Household Panel Data.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 86: 13671374.Google Scholar
Gosling, S.N. and Arnell, N.W.. 2016. “A Global Assessment of the Impact of Climate Change on Water Scarcity.” Climatic Change 134: 371385.Google Scholar
Goss, J., Burch, D. and Rickson, R.E.. 2000. “Agri-Food Restructuring and Third World Transnationals: Thailand, the CP Group and the Global Shrimp Industry.” World Development 28(3): 513530.Google Scholar
Grafton, R.Q., Pittock, J., Davis, R., Williams, J., Fu, G., Warburton, M. et al. 2013. “Global Insights into Water Resources, Climate Change and Governance.” Nature Climate Change 3: 315321.Google Scholar
Graw, V. and Husmann, C.. 2014. “Mapping Marginality Hotspots.” In von Braun, J. and Gatzweiler, F.W. (eds.), Marginality: Addressing the Nexus of Poverty, Exclusion and Ecology. Springer, Berlin, pp. 6983.Google Scholar
Gray, L.C. and Mosley, W.G.. 2005. “A Geographical Perspective on Poverty–Environment Interactions.” Geographical Journal 171(1): 923.Google Scholar
Green, A. and Urquhart, M.C.. 1976. “Factor and Commodity Flows in the International Economy of 1870–1914: A Multi-Country View.” Journal of Economic History 36: 217252.Google Scholar
Grey, D. and Sadoff, C.W.. 2007. “Sink or Swim? Water Security for Growth and Development.” Water Policy 9: 545571.Google Scholar
Grossman, G.M. and Kreuger, A.B.. 1995. “Economic Growth and the Environment.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 110(2): 353377.Google Scholar
Gylfason, T. 2001a. “Natural Resources, Education, and Economic Development.” European Economic Review 45: 847859.Google Scholar
Gylfason, T. 2001b. “Nature, Power, and Growth.” Scottish Journal of Political Economy 48(5): 558588.Google Scholar
Gylfason, T., Herbertsson, T.T. and Zoega, G.. 1999. “A Mixed Blessing: Natural Resources and Economic Growth.” Macroeconomic Dynamics 3: 204225.Google Scholar
Ha, D. and Shively, G.. 2008. “Coffee Boom, Coffee Bust and Smallholder Response in Vietnam’s Central Highlands.” Review of Development Economics 12: 312326CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, D. 2009. “The 2008 World Development Report and the Political Economy of Southeast Asian Agriculture.” Journal of Peasant Studies 36: 603609.Google Scholar
Hall, R.E. and Jones, C.I.. 1999. “Why Do Some Countries Produce So Much More Output Per Worker Than Others?Quarterly Journal of Economics 114(1): 83116.Google Scholar
Hallegatte, S., Bangalore, M., Bonanigo, L., Fay, M., Kane, T., Narloch, U., Rozenberg, J., Treguer, D. and Vogt-Schilb, A.. 2015. Shock Waves: Managing the Impacts of Climate Change on Poverty. World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Hamilton, K. 2003. “Sustaining Economic Welfare: Estimating Changes in Total and Per Capita Wealth.” Environment, Development and Sustainability 5: 419436.Google Scholar
Hamilton, K. and Clemens, M.. 1999. “Genuine Savings Rates in Developing Countries.” World Bank Economic Review 13(2): 333356.Google Scholar
Hannesson, R. 2000. “Renewable Resources and the Gain from Trade.” Canadian Journal of Economics 33: 122132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hansen, B. 1979. “Colonial Economic Development with Unlimited Supply of Land: A Ricardian Case.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 27: 611627.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hartwick, J.M. 1977. “Intergenerational Equity and the Investing of Rents from Exhaustible Resources.” American Economic Review 66: 972974.Google Scholar
Hartwick, J.M. 1978. “Investing Returns from Depleting Renewable Resource Stocks and Intergenerational Equity.” Economic Letters 1: 8588.Google Scholar
Hartwick, J.M. 1995. “Constant Consumption Paths in Open Economies with Exhaustible Resources.” Review of International Economics 3(3): 275285.Google Scholar
Hartwick, J.M., van Long, N. and Tian, H.. 2001. “Deforestation and Development in a Small Open Economy.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 41: 235251.Google Scholar
Hausmann, R. and Rigobon, R.. 2002. An Alternative Interpretation of the “Resource Curse”: Theory and Policy Implications. NBER Working Paper No. 9424. National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Havranek, T., Horvath, R. and Zeynalov, A.. 2016. “Natural Resources and Economic Growth: A Meta-Analysis.” World Development 88: 134151.Google Scholar
Hayami, Y. 2001. Development Economics: From the Poverty to the Wealth of Nations, 2nd ed. Oxford University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Heath, J. and Binswanger, H.. 1996. “Natural Resource Degradation Effects of Poverty and Population Growth Are Largely Policy-Induced: The Case of Colombia.” Environment and Development Economics 1(1): 6584.Google Scholar
Hecht, S. 2014. “Forests Lost and Found in Tropical Latin America: The Woodland ‘Green Revolution.’” Journal of Peasant Studies 41: 877909.Google Scholar
Hill, C.B. 1991. “Managing Commodity Booms in Botswana.” World Development 19(9): 11851196.Google Scholar
Hill, H., Yean, T.S. and Zin, R.H.M.. 2012. “Malaysia: A Success Story Stuck in the Middle?The World Economy 35(12): 16871711.Google Scholar
Hillbom, E. 2012. “Botswana: A Development-Oriented Gate-Keeper State.” African Affairs 111(142): 6789.Google Scholar
Hillbom, E. 2014. “Cattle, Diamonds and Institutions: Main Drivers of Botswana’s Economic Development, 1850 to Present.” Journal of International Development 26: 155176.Google Scholar
Hirsch, P. 2009. “Revisiting Frontiers as Transitional Spaces in Thailand.” Geographical Journal 175: 124132.Google Scholar
Hochard, J.P. and Barbier, E.B. 2017. “Market Accessibility and Economic Growth: Insights from a New Dimension of Inequality.” World Development 97: 279297.Google Scholar
Hoekstra, A.Y. 2010. The Relation between International Trade and Freshwater Scarcity. World Trade Organization (WTO). Staff Working Paper ERSD_2010-05. World Trade Organization, Geneva.Google Scholar
Hoekstra, A.Y., Mekonnen, M.M., Chapagain, A.K., Mathews, R.E. and Richter, B.D.. 2012. “Global Monthly Water Scarcity: Blue Water Footprints versus Blue Water Availability.” PLoS ONE 7(2): e32688.Google Scholar
Hoff, K. and Stiglitz, J.E.. 1990. “Introduction: Imperfect Information and Rural Credit Markets – Puzzles and Policy Perspectives.” World Bank Economic Review 4(3): 235250.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoff, K., Braverman, A. and Stiglitz, J.E. (eds.). 1993. The Economics of Rural Organization: Theory, Practice and Policy. Oxford University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Holden, S., Shiferaw, B. and Pender, J.. 2004. “Non-farm Income, Household Welfare, and Sustainable Land Management in a Less-Favoured Area in the Ethiopian Highlands.” Food Policy 29: 369392.Google Scholar
Holland, T.G., Coomes, O.T. and Robinson, B.E.. 2016. “Evolving Frontier Land Markets and the Opportunity Cost of Sparing Forests in Western Amazonia.” Land Use Policy 58: 456471.Google Scholar
Holtz-Eakin, D. and Selden, T.M.. 1995. “Stoking the Fires? CO2 Emissions and Economic Growth.” Journal of Public Economics 57: 85101.Google Scholar
Hosonuma, N., Herold, M., de Sy, V., DeFries, R.S., Brockhaus, M., Verchot, L., Angelsen, A. and Romijn, E.. 2012. “An Assessment of Deforestation and Forest Degradation Drivers in Developing Countries.” Environmental Research Letters 7: 044009.Google Scholar
Hotte, L., Van Long, N. and Tian, H.. 2000. “International Trade with Endogenous Enforcement of Property Rights.” Journal of Development Economics 62: 2554.Google Scholar
Howarth, R.B. and Norgaard, R.B.. 1995. “Intergenerational Choices under Global Environmental Change.” In Bromley, D. (ed.), The Handbook of Environmental Economics. Basil Blackwell, Oxford, pp. 111138.Google Scholar
Huff, G. 2007. “Globalization, Natural Resources, and Foreign Investment: A View from the Resource-Rich Tropics.” Oxford Economic Papers 59: i127i155.Google Scholar
Iimi, A. 2007. “Escaping the Resource Curse: Evidence from Botswana and the Rest of the World.” IMF Staff Working Papers 54: 663699.Google Scholar
Inikori, J.E. 2002. Africans and the Industrial Revolution in England: A Study in International Trade and Economic Development. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Innis, H.A. 1930. The Fur Trade in Canada: An Introduction to Canadian Economic History. Yale University Press, New Haven.Google Scholar
Innis, H.A. 1940. The Cod Fisheries: The History of an International Economy. Yale University Press, New Haven.Google Scholar
Isham, J., Woolcock, M., Pritchett, L. and Busby, G.. 2005. “The Varieties of Resource Experience: Natural Resource Export Structures and the Political Economy of Economic Growth.” World Bank Economic Review 19(2): 141174.Google Scholar
Jalan, J. and Ravallion, M.. 2002. “Geographic Poverty Traps? A Micro Model of Consumption Growth in Rural China.” Journal of Applied Econometrics 17: 329346.Google Scholar
James, A. 2015. “The Resource Curse: A Statistical Mirage?Journal of Development Economics 114: 5563.Google Scholar
Jansen, H.G.P., Rodriguez, A., Damon, A., Pender, J., Chenier, J. and Schipper, R.. 2006. “Determinants of Income-Earning Strategies and Adoption of Conservation Practices in Hillside Communities in Rural Honduras.” Agricultural Systems 88: 92110.Google Scholar
Jessoe, K., Manning, D.T. and Taylor, J.E.. 2018. “Climate Change and Labour Allocation in Rural Mexico: Evidence from Annual Fluctuations in Weather.” Economic Journal 128(608): 230261.Google Scholar
Jinji, N. 2006. “International Trade and Terrestrial Open-Access Renewable Resources in a Small Open Economy.” Canadian Journal of Economics 39(3): 790808.Google Scholar
Johnstone, N. and Wood, L. (eds.). 2001. Private Firms and Public Water: Realizing Social and Environmental Objectives in Developing Countries. Edward Elgar, London.Google Scholar
Jones, E.L. 1987. The European Miracle: Environments, Economics and Geopolitics in the History of Europe and Asia, 2nd ed. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Kaimowitz, D. and Angelsen, A.. 1998. Economic Models of Tropical Deforestation: A Review. Center for International Forestry Research, Bogor.Google Scholar
Kamarck, A.M. 1976. The Tropics and Economic Development. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.Google Scholar
Karp, L. 2005. “Property Rights, Mobile Capital, and Comparative Advantage.” Journal of Development Economics 77: 367387.Google Scholar
Kavanagh, P.H., Vilela, B., Haynie, H.J., Tuff, T., Lima-Ribiero, M., Gray, R.D., Botero, C.A. and Gavin, M.C.. 2018. “Hindcasting Global Population Densities Reveals Forces Enabling the Origin of Agriculture.” Nature Human Behaviour 2 : 478484.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Keefer, P. and Knack, S.. 1997. “Why Don’t Poor Countries Catch Up? A Cross-National Test of an Institutional Explanation.” Economic Inquiry 35: 590602.Google Scholar
Keenan, R.J., Reams, G.A., Achard, F., de Freitas, J.V., Grainger, A. and Lindquist, E.. 2015. “Dynamics of Global Forest Area: Results from the FAO Global Forest Resources Assessment 2015.” Forest Ecology and Management 352: 920.Google Scholar
Kelly, P. and Huo, X.. 2013. “Land Retirement and Nonfarm Labor Market Participation: An Analysis of China’s Sloping Land Conversion Program.” World Development 48: 156169.Google Scholar
Kennedy, P. 1988. The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers: Economic Change and Military Conflict from 1500 to 2000. Fontana Press, London.Google Scholar
Kimmage, K. 1991. “Small-Scale Irrigation Initiatives in Nigeria: The Problem of Equity and Sustainability.” Aplied Geography 11: 520.Google Scholar
Kimmage, K. and Adams, W.M.. 1992. “Wetland Agricultural Production and River Basin Development in the HadejiaJama’are Valley, Nigeria.” Geographical Journal 158(1): 112.Google Scholar
Knudsen, M.H. and Agergaard, J.. 2015. “Ghana’s Cocoa Frontier in Transition: The Role of Migration and Livelihood Diversification.” Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography 97: 325342.Google Scholar
Knudsen, M.H. and Fold, N.. 2011. “Land Distribution and Acquisition Practices in Ghana’s Cocoa Frontier: The Impact of a State-Regulated Marketing System.” Land Use Policy 28: 378387.Google Scholar
Komen, M.H.C., Gerking, S. and Folmer, H.. 1997. “Income and Environmental R&D: Empirical Evidence from OECD Countries.” Environment and Development Economics 2(4): 505515.Google Scholar
Koop, G. and Toole, L.. 1999. “Is There an Environmental Kuznets Curve for Deforestation?Journal of Development Economics 58: 231244.Google Scholar
Kraay, A. and McKenzie, D.. 2014. “Do Poverty Traps Exist? Assessing the Evidence.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 28: 127148.Google Scholar
Kremer, M. 1993. “Population Growth and Technological Change: One Million BC to 1990.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 108(3): 681716.Google Scholar
Krugman, P.R. 1981. “Trade, Accumulation, and Uneven Development.” Journal of Development Economics 8: 149161.Google Scholar
Krugman, P.R. 1987. “The Narrow Moving Band, the Dutch Disease, and the Competitive Consequences of Mrs Thatcher: Notes on Trade in the Presence of Dynamic Scale Economies.” Journal of Development Economics 27: 4155.Google Scholar
Kuusela, O.-P. and Amacher, G.S.. 2016. “Changing Political Regimes and Tropical Deforestation.” Environmental and Resource Economics 64: 445463.Google Scholar
Kuznets, S. 1955. “Economic Growth and Income Inequality.” American Economic Review 49: 128.Google Scholar
La Porta, R., Lopez-de-Silanes, F., Shleifer, A. and Vishny, R.W.. 1998. “Law and Finance.” Journal of Political Economy 106(6): 11131155.Google Scholar
La Porta, R., Lopez-de-Silanes, F., Shleifer, A. and Vishny, R.W.. 1999. “The Quality of Government.” Journal of Law, Economics and Organization 15(1): 222279.Google Scholar
Lade, S.J., Jamila Haider, L, Engström, G. and Schlüter, M.. 2017. “Resilience Offers Escape from Trapped Thinking on Poverty Alleviation.” Science Advances 3(5): e1603043.Google Scholar
Lambin, E.F. and Meyfroidt, P.. 2011. “Global Land Use Change, Economic Globalization, and the Looming Land Scarcity.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108: 34653472.Google Scholar
Landes, D.S. 1998. The Wealth and Poverty of Nations: Why Some Are So Rich and Some So Poor. W. W. Norton and Co., New York.Google Scholar
Lane, P.R. and Tornell, A.. 1996. “Power, Growth and the Voracity Effect.” Journal of Economic Growth 1: 213241.Google Scholar
Lang, C., Barrett, C.B. and Naschold, F.. 2013. “Targeting Maps: An Asset-Based Approach to Geographic Targeting.” World Development 41: 232244.Google Scholar
Lange, G.-M. and Wright, M.. 2004. “Sustainable Development in Mineral Economies: The Example of Botswana.” Environment and Development Economics 9: 485505.Google Scholar
Lange, G.-M., Wodon, Q. and Carey, K. (eds.). 2018. The Changing Wealth of Nations 2018: Building a Sustainable Future. World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Larson, B.A. 1991. “The Causes of Land Degradation along ‘Spontaneously’ Expanding Agricultural Frontiers in the Third World: A Comment.” Land Economics 67(2): 260266.Google Scholar
Larson, B.A. and Bromley, D.W.. 1990. “Property Rights, Externalities, and Resource Degradation: Locating the Tragedy.” Journal of Development Economics 33: 235262.Google Scholar
Laurence, W.F., Sayer, J. and Cassman, K.G.. 2014. “Agricultural Expansion and Its Impact on Tropical Nature.” Trends in Ecology & Evolution 29: 107116.Google Scholar
Leblois, A., Damette, O. and Wolfsberger, J.. 2018. “What Has Driven Deforestation in Developing Countries Since the 2000s? Evidence from New Remote-Sensing Data.” World Development 92: 82102.Google Scholar
Leite, C. and Weidmann, J.. 1999. Does Mother Nature Corrupt? Natural Resources, Corruption and Economic Growth. IMF Working Papers WP/99/85. International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Leeson, P.T. and Harris, C.. 2018. “Wealth-Destroying Private Property Rights.” World Development 107: 19.Google Scholar
Li, T.M. 2011. “Centering Labor in the Land Grab Debate.” Journal of Peasant Studies 38: 281298.Google Scholar
Libecap, G.D. 2007. “The Assignment of Property Rights on the Western Frontier: Lessons for Contemporary Environmental and Resource Policy.” Journal of Economic History 67(2): 257291.Google Scholar
Lieb, C.M. 2002. “The Environmental Kuznets Curve and Satiation: A Simple Static Model.” Environment and Development Economics 7(3): 429448.Google Scholar
Lin, C.-Y.C. and Liscow, Z.D.. 2012. “Endogeneity in the Environmental Kuznets Curve: An Instrumental Variables Approach.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 95(2): 268274.Google Scholar
Liscow, Z.D. 2013. “Do Property Rights Promote Investment but Cause Deforestation? Quasi-experimental Evidence from Nicaragua.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 65: 241261.Google Scholar
Livi-Bacci, M. 1997. A Concise History of World Population, 2nd ed. Blackwell Publishers, Oxford.Google Scholar
López, R. 1989. “Exchange Rate Determination in Natural Resource-Rich Economies.” Revista de Análisis Económico 4(1): 91105.Google Scholar
López, R. 1994. “The Environment as a Factor of Production: The Effects of Economic Growth and Trade Liberalization.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 27(2): 163184.Google Scholar
López, R. 1997. “Environmental Externalities in Traditional Agriculture and the Impact of Trade Liberalization: The Case of Ghana.” Journal of Development Economics 53: 1739.Google Scholar
López, R. 1998a. “Agricultural Intensification, Common Property Resources and the Farm-Household.” Environmental and Resource Economics 11(3–4): 443458.Google Scholar
López, R. 1998b. “Where Development Can or Cannot Go: The Role of Poverty–Environment Linkages.” In Pleskovic, B. and Stiglitz, J.E. (eds.), Annual Bank Conference on Development Economics 1997. World Bank, Washington, DC, pp. 285306.Google Scholar
López, R. 2003. “The Policy Roots of Socioeconomic Stagnation and Environmental Implosion: Latin America 1950–2000.” World Development 31(2): 259280.Google Scholar
López, R., Anríquez, G. and Gulati, S.. 2007. “Structural Change and Sustainable Development.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 53: 307322.Google Scholar
López, R. and Mitra, S.. 2000. “Corruption, Pollution and the Kuznets Environment Curve.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 40(2): 137150.Google Scholar
López, R. and Valdés, A. (eds.). 1998. Rural Poverty in Latin America. World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
López-Feldman, A. 2014. “Shocks, Income and Wealth: Do They Affect the Extraction of Natural Resources by Households?World Development 64: S91–S100.Google Scholar
López-Feldman, A. and Wilen, J.E.. 2008. “Poverty and Spatial Dimensions of Non-timber Forest Extraction.” Environment and Development Economics 13: 621642.Google Scholar
Lundahl, MatMs. 1998. “Staples Trade and Economic Development.” In Lundahl, M. (ed.), Themes of International Economics. Ashgate Publishing, Boston, pp. 4568.Google Scholar
Luo, T., Young, R. and Reig, P.. 2015. Aqueduct projected water stress rankings. Technical note. World Resources Institute, Washington, DC. www.wri.org/publication/aqueduct-projected-water-stress-country-rankings.Google Scholar
Macedo, M.N., DeFries, R.S., Morton, D.C., Stickler, C.M., Galford, G.L. and Shimabukuro, Y.E.. 2012. “Decoupling of Deforestation and Soy Production in the Southern Amazon during the Late 2000s.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109: 13411346.Google Scholar
McCarthy, J. and Cramb, R.. 2009. “Policy Narratives, Landholder Engagement, and Oil Palm Expansion on the Malaysian and Indonesia Frontiers.” Geographical Journal 175: 112123.Google Scholar
McConnell, K.E. 1997. “Income and the Demand for Environmental Quality.” Environment and Development Economics 2(4): 383399.Google Scholar
McNeil, J.R. and McNeil, W.H.. 2003. The Human Web: A Bird’s Eye View of Human History. W. W. Norton & Co., New York.Google Scholar
McNeil, W.H. 1999. A World History, 4th ed. Oxford University Press, New York.Google Scholar
McSweeney, K. 2005. “Natural Insurance, Forest Access, and Compound Misfortune: Forest Resources in Smallholder Coping Strategies Before and After Hurricane Mitch in Northeastern Honduras.” World Development 33(9): 14531471.Google Scholar
Maddison, A. 2003. The World Economy: Historical Statistics. Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Paris.Google Scholar
Maertens, M., Zeller, M. and Birner, R.. 2006. “Sustainable Agricultural Intensification in Forest Frontier Areas.” Agricultural Economics 34: 197206.Google Scholar
Mahar, D. and Schneider, R.R.. 1994. “Incentives for Tropical Deforestation: Some Examples from Latin America.” In Brown, K. and Pearce, D.W. (eds.), The Causes of Tropical Deforestation. University College London Press, London, pp. 159170.Google Scholar
Mahon, J.E. 1992. “Was Latin America Too Rich to Prosper? Structural and Political Obstacles to Export-Led Industrial Growth.” Journal of Development Studies 28: 241263.Google Scholar
Mäler, K.-G. 1991. “National Accounts and Environmental Resources.” Environmental and Resource Economics 1(1): 115.Google Scholar
Mäler, K.-G. 1995. “Economic Growth and the Environment.” In Perrings, C.A., Mäler, K.-G., Folke, C., Holling, C.S. and Jansson, B.-O. (eds.), Biodiversity Loss: Economic and Ecological Issues. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 213224.Google Scholar
Manning, D.T. and Taylor, J.E.. 2015. “Agricultural Efficiency and Labor Supply to Common Property Resource Collection: Lessons from Rural Mexico.” Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics 40(3): 365386.Google Scholar
Manning, D.T., Taylor, J.E. and Wilen, J.E.. 2014. “Market Integration and Natural Resource Use in Developing Countries: A Linked Agrarian–Resource Rconomy in Northern Honduras.” Environment and Development Economics 19(2): 133155.Google Scholar
Manning, D.T., Taylor, J.E. and Wilen, J.E.. 2016. “General Equilibrium Tragedy of the Commons.” Environmental and Resource Economics 69(1): 75101.Google Scholar
Manning, P. 2003. Negotiating World History: Historians Create a Global Past. Palgrave Macmillan, New York.Google Scholar
Manzano, O. and Rigobon, R.. 2001. Resource Curse or Debt Overhang? NBER Working Paper No. 8390. National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Marks, R.B. 2002. The Origins of the Modern World. Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham.Google Scholar
Mather, A.S. 1992. “The Forest Transition.” Area 24: 367379.Google Scholar
Matsuyama, K. 1992. “Agricultural Productivity, Comparative Advantage, and Economic Growth.” Journal of Economic Theory 58: 317334.Google Scholar
Mauro, P. 1995. “Corruption and Growth.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 110(3): 681712.Google Scholar
Mayer, J. and Wood, A.. 2001. “South Asia’s Export Structure in a Comparative Perspective.” Oxford Development Studies 29: 529.Google Scholar
McAusland, C. 2005. “Learning by Doing in the Presence of an Open Access Renewable Resource: Is Growth Sustainable?Natural Resource Modeling 18(1): 4168.Google Scholar
McDonald, R.I., Green, P., Balk, D., Fekete, B.M., Revenga, C., Todd, M. and Montgomery, M.. 2011. “Urban Growth, Climate Change, and Freshwater Availability.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108(15): 63126317.Google Scholar
McNeill, J.R. and McNeill, W.H.. 2003. The Human Web: A Bird’s Eye View of Human History. W. W. Norton & Co., New York.Google Scholar
Megginson, W.L. and Fotak, V.. 2015. “Rise of the Fiduciary State: A Survey of Sovereign Wealth Fund Research.” Journal of Economic Surveys 29(4): 733778.Google Scholar
Mehlum, H., Moene, K. and Torvik, R.. 2006. “Institutions and the Resource Curse.” Economic Journal 116: 120.Google Scholar
Melstrom, R.T., Jones, L.R. and Caviglia-Harris, J.. 2016. “Patterns of Frontier Development: A Dynamic Model of Resource Extraction in the Brazilian Amazon.” Environment and Development Economics 21(3): 350370.Google Scholar
Meyfroidt, P., Phuong, V.T. and Anh, H.V.. 2013. “Trajectories of Deforestation, Coffee Expansion and Displacement of Shifting Cultivation in the Central Highlands of Vietnam.” Global Environmental Change 23: 11871198.Google Scholar
Meyfroidt, P., Carlson, K.M., Fagan, M.E., Gutiérrez-Vélez, V.H., Macedo, M.N., Curran, L.M., DeFries, R.S., Dyer, G.A., Gibbs, H.K., Lambin, E.F., Morton, D.C. and Robiglio, V.. 2014. “Multiple pathways of commodity crop expansion in tropical forest landscapes.” Environmental and Research Letters 9: 074012.Google Scholar
Miller, R. 2017. “Childhood Health and Prenatal Exposure to Seasonal Food Scarcity in Ethiopia.” World Development 99: 350376.Google Scholar
Miller, R. 2018. “Early Childhood Health and Schooling Attainment Gaps Within and Across Countries.” Macroeconomic Dynamics Published online. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1365100518000500.Google Scholar
Mullan, K., Sills, E., Pattanayak, S.K. and Caviglia-Harris, J.. 2018. “Converting Forests to Farms: The Economic Benefits of Clearing Forests in Agricultural Settlements in the Amazon.” Environmental and Resource Economics 71(2): 427455.Google Scholar
Murphy, K., Shleifer, A. and Vishny, R. 1993. “Why is Rent-Seeking So Costly to Growth?American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings 83: 409414.Google Scholar
Myint, H. 1958. “The Classical Theory of International Trade and the Underdeveloped Countries.” Economic Journal 68: 315337.Google Scholar
Myrdal, G. 1957. Economic Theory and Under-developed Regions. Duckworth, London.Google Scholar
Narain, U., Gupta, S. and van’t Veld, K.. 2008. “Poverty and Resource Dependence in Rural India.” Ecological Economics 66(1): 161176.Google Scholar
Narloch, U. and Bangalore, M.. 2018. “The Multifaceted Relationship between Environmental Risks and Poverty: New Insights from Vietnam.” Environment and Development Economics 23: 298327.Google Scholar
Naschold, F. 2012. “The Poor Stay Poor: Household Asset Poverty Traps in Rural Semi-arid India.” World Development 40: 20332043.Google Scholar
Naschold, F. 2013. “Welfare Dynamics in Pakistan and Ethiopia – Does the Estimation Method Matter?Journal of Development Studies 49(7): 936954.Google Scholar
Nasuchon, N. and Charles, A.. 2010. “Community Involvement in Fisheries Management: Experiences in the Gulf of Thailand Countries.” Marine Policy 34: 163169.Google Scholar
Nauges, C. and Whittington, D.. 2010. “Estimation of Water Demand in Developing Countries: An Overview.” World Bank Research Observer 25(2): 263294.Google Scholar
Neary, J.P. and van Wijnbergen, S. (eds.). 1986. Natural Resources and the Macroeconomy. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Nelson, G.C., Harris, V. and Stone, S.W.. 2001. “Deforestation, Land Use, and Property Rights: Empirical Evidence from Darién, Panama.” Land Economics 77(2): 187205.Google Scholar
Neumayer, E. 2003. Weak versus Strong Sustainability: Exploring the Limits of Two Opposing Paradigms. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham.Google Scholar
Newton, P., Agrawal, A. and Wollenberg, L.. 2013. “Enhancing the Sustainability of Commodity Supply Chains in Tropical Forest and Agricultural Landscapes.” Global Environmental Change 23: 17611772.Google Scholar
North, D.C. 1990. Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
North, D.C. and Thomas, R.P.. 1973. The Rise of the Western World: A New Economic History. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Nunn, N. 2008. “The Long-Term Effects of Africa’s Slave Trades.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 123(1): 139176Google Scholar
Ollivier, H. 2012. “Growth, Deforestation and the Efficiency of the REDD Mechanism.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 64: 312327.Google Scholar
Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). 2012. OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050: The Consequences of Inaction. OECD, Paris.Google Scholar
Ostrom, E. 1990. Governing the Commons: The Evolution of Institutions for Collective Action. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Ostrom, E. 2001. “Reformulating the Commons.” In Burger, J., Ostrom, E., Norgaard, R.B., Policansky, D. and Goldstein, B.D. (eds.), Protecting the Commons: A Framework for Resource Management in the Americas. Island Press, Washington, DC, pp. 1744.Google Scholar
Panayotou, T. 1995. “Environmental Degradation at Different Stages of Economic Development.” In Ahmed, I. and Doeleman, J.A. (eds.), Beyond Rio: The Environmental Crisis and Sustainable Livelihoods in the Third World. Macmillan Press, London, pp. 1336.Google Scholar
Panayotou, T. 1997. “Demystifying the Environmental Kuznets Curve: Turning a Black Box into a Policy Tool.” Environment and Development Economics 2(4): 465484.Google Scholar
Panayotou, T. and Sungsuwan, S.. 1994. “An Econometric Analysis of the Causes of Tropical Deforestation: The Case of Northeast Thailand.” In Brown, K. and Pearce, D.W. (eds.), The Causes of Tropical Deforestation: The Economic and Statistical Analysis of Factors Giving Rise to the Loss of the Tropical Forests. University College London Press, London, pp. 192210.Google Scholar
Papyrakis, E. and Gerlagh, R.. 2004. “The Resource Curse Hypothesis and Its Transmission Channels.” Journal of Comparative Economics 32: 181193.Google Scholar
Parker, D.D. and Tsur, Y. (eds.). 1997. Decentralization and Coordination of Water Resource Management. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht.Google Scholar
Pascual, U. and Barbier, E.B.. 2006. “Deprived Land-Use Intensification in Shifting Cultivation: The Population Pressure Hypothesis Revisited.” Agricultural Economics 34: 155165.Google Scholar
Pascual, U. and Barbier, E.B.. 2007. “On Price Liberalization, Poverty, and Shifting Cultivation: An Example from Mexico.” Land Economics 83: 192216.Google Scholar
Pattanayak, S.K. and Sills, E.. 2001. “Do Tropical Forests Provide Natural Insurance? The Microeconomics of Non-timber Forest Products Collection in the Brazilian Amazon.” Land Economics 77(4): 595612.Google Scholar
Pattanayak, S.K., Mercer, D.E., Sills, E. and Yang, J.-C.. 2003. “Taking Stock of Agroforestry Adoption Studies.” Agroforestry Systems 57: 173186.Google Scholar
Paul, S.K. and Routray, J.K.. 2011. “Household Response to Cyclone Induced Surge in Coastal Bangladesh: Coping Strategies and Explanatory Variables.” Natural Hazards 57: 477499.Google Scholar
Pearce, D.W. and Atkinson, G.. 1993. “Capital Theory and the Measurement of Sustainable Development: An Indicator of Weak Sustainability.” Ecological Economics 8: 103108.Google Scholar
Pearce, D.W. and Barbier, E.B.. 2000. Blueprint for a Sustainable Economy. Earthscan Publications, London.Google Scholar
Pearce, D.W., Barbier, E.B. and Markandya, A.. 1990 Sustainable Development: Economics and Environment in the Third World. Edward Elgar, London.Google Scholar
Pearce, D.W., Markandya, A. and Barbier, E.B.. 1989. Blueprint for a Green Economy. Earthscan Publications, London.Google Scholar
Pegg, S. 2010. “Is There a Dutch Disease in Botswana?Resources Policy 35: 1419.Google Scholar
Pender, J. 2004. “Development Pathways for Hillsides and Highlands: Some Lessons from Central America and East Africa.” Food Policy 29: 339367.Google Scholar
Pender, J. 2008. Agricultural Technology Choices for Poor Farmers in Less-Favoured Areas of South and East Asia. Occasional Paper 5. Asia and Pacific Division, International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), Rome.Google Scholar
Pender, J. and Hazell, P.. 2000. “Promoting Sustainable Development in Less-Favored Areas: Overview. Brief 1.” In Pender, J. and Hazell, P. (eds.), Promoting Sustainable Development in Less-Favored Areas. 2020 Vision Initiative, Policy Brief Series, Focus 4. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC, pp. 13.Google Scholar
Pezzey, J.C.V. 1989. Economic Analysis of Sustainable Growth and Sustainable Development. Environment Department Working Paper No. 15. World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Pfaff, A., Robalino, J., Lima, E., Sandoval, C. and Herrera, L.D.. 2014. “Governance, Location and Avoided Deforestation from Protected Areas: Greater Restrictions Can Have Lower Impact, Due to Differences in Location.” World Development 55: 720.Google Scholar
Pingali, P.L. 2001. “Environmental Consequences of Agricultural Commercialization in Asia.” Environment and Development Economics 6(4): 483502.Google Scholar
Pingali, P., Schneider, K. and Zurek, M.. 2014. “Poverty, Agriculture and the Environment: The Case of Sub-Saharan Africa.” In von Braun, J. and Gatzweiler, F.W. (eds.), Marginality: Addressing the Nexus of Poverty, Exclusion and Ecology. Springer, Berlin, pp. 151168.Google Scholar
Place, F. 2009. “Land Tenure and Agricultural Productivity in Africa: A Comparative Analysis of the Economics Literature and Recent Policy Strategies and Reforms.” World Development 37(8): 13261336.Google Scholar
Pomeranz, K. 2000. The Great Divergence: Europe, China, and the Making of the Modern World Economy. Princeton University Press, Princeton.Google Scholar
Pomeranz, K. and Topik, S.. 1999. The World That Trade Created: Society, Culture and the World Economy, 1400–the Present. M. E. Sharpe, New York.Google Scholar
Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations. 2018. 2018 Revision of World Urbanization Prospects. United Nations, New York. https://esa.un.org/unpd/wup.Google Scholar
Porkka, M., Gerten, D., Schaphoff, S., Siebert, S. and Kummu, M.. 2016. “Causes and Trends of Water Scarcity in Food Production.” Environmental Research Letters 11: 015001.Google Scholar
Prebisch, R. 1950. “The Economic Development of Latin America and its Principal Problems.” Economic Bulletin for Latin America 7(1): 122.Google Scholar
Prebisch, R. 1959. “Commercial Policy in the Underdeveloped Countries.” American Economic Review 59(2): 251273.Google Scholar
Raffer, K. and Singer, H.W.. 2001. The Economic North–South Divide: Six Decades of Unequal Development. Edward Elgar, London.Google Scholar
Rahim, K.A. and Liwan, A.. 2012. “Oil and Gas Trends and Implications in Malaysia.” Energy Policy 50: 262271.Google Scholar
Reardon, T. and Barrett, C.B.. 2000. “Agroindustrialization, Globalization, and International Development: An Overview of Issues, Patterns, and Determinants.” Agricultural Economics 23(3): 195205.Google Scholar
Rebelo, S. 1991. “Long Run Policy Analysis and Long Run Growth.” Journal of Political Economy 99: 500521.Google Scholar
Richards, M. 1997. “Common Property Resource Institutions and Forest Management in Latin America.” Development and Change 28: 95117.Google Scholar
Richards, P.D. 2015. “What Drives Indirect Land Use Change? How Brazil’s Agriculture Sector Influences Frontier Deforestation.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 105: 10261040.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Richards, P.D., Walker, R.T. and Arima, E.Y.. 2014. “Spatially Complex Land Change: The Indirect Effect of Brazil’s Agricultural Sector on Land Use in Amazonia.” Global Environmental Change 29: 19.Google Scholar
Robalino, J.A. and Pfaff, A.. 2012. “Contagious Development: Neighbor Interactions in Deforestation.” Journal of Development Economics 97: 427436.Google Scholar
Robinson, E.J.Z. 2016. “Resource-Dependent Livelihoods and the Natural Resource Base.” Annual Reviews of Resource Economics 8: 281301.Google Scholar
Robinson, J.A., Torvik, R. and Verdier, T.. 2006. “Political Foundations of the Resource Curse.” Journal of Development Economics 79(2): 447468.Google Scholar
Robinson, B.E., Holland, M.B. and Naughton-Treves, L.. 2014. “Does Secure Land Tenure Save Forests? A Meta-Analysis of the Relationship between Land Tenure and Tropical Deforestation.” Global Environmental Change 29: 281293.Google Scholar
Rodrigues, A., Ewers, R., Parry, L., Souza, C., Verissimo, A. and Balmford, A.. 2009. “Boom-and-Bust Development Patterns across the Amazonian Deforestation Frontier.” Science 324: 14351437.Google Scholar
Rodríguez, F. and Sachs, J.D.. 1999. “Why Do Resource-Abundant Economies Grow More Slowly?Journal of Economic Growth 4: 277303.Google Scholar
Rodríguez-Meza, J., Southgate, D. and González-Vega, C.. 2004. “Rural Poverty, Household Responses to Shocks, and Agricultural Land Use: Panel Results for El Salvador.” Environment and Development Economics 9: 225240.Google Scholar
Rodrik, D., Subramanian, A. and Trebbi, F.. 2004. “Institutions Rule: The Primacy of Institutions over Geography and Economic Integration in Economic Development.” Journal of Economic Growth 9(2): 131165.Google Scholar
Romer, P.M. 1986. “Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth.” Journal of Political Economy 94(5): 10021037.Google Scholar
Romer, P.M. 1996. “Why, Indeed, in America? Theory, History, and the Origins of Modern Economic Growth.” American Economic Review 86(2): 202212.Google Scholar
Rosegrant, M.W., Ringler, C. and Zhu, T.. 2009. “Water for Agriculture: Maintaining Food Security under Growing Scarcity.” Annual Review of Environment and Resources 3–4: 205222.Google Scholar
Ross, M.L. 1999. “The Political Economy of the Resource Curse.” World Politics 51: 297322.Google Scholar
Rudel, T. 2007. “Changing Agents of Deforestation: From State-Initiated to Enterprise-Driven Process.” Land Use Policy 24: 3541.Google Scholar
Rudel, T.K., Coomes, O.T., Moran, E., Achard, F., Angelsen, A., Xu, J. and Lambin, E.. 2005. “Forest Transitions: Towards a Global Understanding of Land Use Change.” Global Environmental Change 15: 2331.Google Scholar
Sachs, J.D. and Warner, A.M.. 1995. “Economic Reform and the Process of Global Integration.” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 1: 1118.Google Scholar
Sachs, J.D. and Warner, A.M.. 1997. “Fundamental Sources of Long-Run Growth.” American Economic Review 87(2): 184188.Google Scholar
Sachs, J.D. and Warner, A.M.. 1999a. “The Big Push, Natural Resource Booms and Growth.” Journal of Development Economics 59: 4376.Google Scholar
Sachs, J.D. and Warner, A.M.. 1999b. “Natural Resource Intensity and Economic Growth.” In Mayer, J., Chambers, B. and Farooq, A. (eds.), Development Policies in Natural Resource Economies. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, pp. 1338.Google Scholar
Sachs, J.D. and Warner, A.M.. 2001. “The Curse of Natural Resources.” European Economic Review 45: 827838.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M. 1974. Stone Age Economics. Tavistock Publications, London.Google Scholar
Sala-I-Martin, X. and Subramanian, A.. 2013. “Addressing the Natural Resource Curse: An Illustration from Nigeria.” Journal of African Economies 22(4): 570615.Google Scholar
Saleth, R.M. and Dinar, A.. 2005. “Water Institutional Reforms: Theory and Practice.” Water Policy 7: 119Google Scholar
Sarraf, M. and Jiwanji, M.. 2001. Beating the Resource Curse: The Case of Botswana. Environmental Economics Series. World Bank Environment Department, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Sartorius, B.K.D. and Sartorius, K.. 2014. “Global Infant Mortality Trends and Attributable Determinants – An Ecological Study Using Data from 192 Countries for the Period 1990–2011.” Population Health Metrics 12: 29.Google Scholar
Sathirathai, S. and Barbier, E.B.. 2001. “Valuing Mangrove Conservation in Southern Thailand.” Contemporary Economic Policy 19(2): 109122.Google Scholar
Schedvin, C.B. 1990. “Staples and Regions of Pax Britannica.” Economic History Review 43: 533559.Google Scholar
Schneider, R.R. 1994. Government and the Economy on the Amazon Frontier. Latin America and the Caribbean Technical Department, Regional Studies Program, Report No. 34. World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Schoengold, K. and Zilberman, D.. 2007. “The Economics of Water, Irrigation, and Development.” In Evenson, R. and Pingali, P. (eds.), Handbook of Agricultural Economics, Vol. III. Amsterdam, Elsevier, pp. 29332977.Google Scholar
Schumpeter, J.A. 1961. A Theory of Economic Development: An Inquiry into Profits, Capital, Credit, Interest, and the Business Cycle. Oxford University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Seckler, D., Barker, R. and Amarasinghe, U.. 1999. “Water Scarcity in the Twenty-first Century.” International Journal of Water Resources Development 15(1/2): 2942.Google Scholar
Seers, D. 1962. “A Model of Comparative Rates of Growth in the World Economy.” Economic Journal 72: 4578.Google Scholar
Selden, T.M. and Song, D.. 1994. “Environmental Quality and Development: Is There a Kuznets Curve for Air Pollution Emissions?Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 27: 147162.Google Scholar
Shafik, N. 1994. “Economic Development and Environmental Quality: An Econometric Analysis.” Oxford Economic Papers 46: 757773.Google Scholar
Shively, G.E. 1997. “Poverty, Technology, and Wildlife Hunting in Palawan.” Environmental Conservation 24(1), 5763.Google Scholar
Shively, G.E. 2001. “Agricultural Change, Rural Labor Markets, and Forest Clearing.” Land Economics 77(2): 268284.Google Scholar
Shively, G.E. and Fisher, M.. 2004. “Smallholder Labor and Deforestation: A Systems Approach.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 86(5): 13611366.Google Scholar
Shively, G.E. and Pagiola, S.. 2004. “Agricultural Intensification, Local Labor Markets and Deforestation in the Philipines.” Environment and Development Economics 9: 241266.Google Scholar
Shone, B.M. and Caviglia-Harris, J.. 2006. “Quantifying and Comparing the Value of Non-timber Forest Products in the Amazon.” Ecological Economics 58: 249267.Google Scholar
Singer, H.W. 1950. “The Distribution of Gains between Investing and Borrowing Countries.” American Economic Review 40: 473485.Google Scholar
Singh, I., Squire, L. and Strauss, J. (eds.). 1986. Agricultural Household Models: Extensions, Aplications and Policy. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.Google Scholar
Siry, H.Y. 2006. “Decentralized Coastal Zone Management in Malaysia and Indonesia: A Comparative Perspective.” Coastal Management 34: 267285.Google Scholar
Smith, B. 2015. “The Resource Curse Exorcised: Evidence from a Panel of Countries.” Journal of Development Economics 116: 5773.Google Scholar
Smith, B.D. 1995. The Emergence of Agriculture. Scientific American Library, New York.Google Scholar
Smith, S. 1976. “An Extension of the Vent-for-Surplus Model in Relation to Long-Run Structural Change in Nigeria.” Oxford Economic Papers 28(3): 426446.Google Scholar
Smith, V.L. 1975. “The Primitive Hunter Culture, Pleistocene Extinction, and the Rise of Agriculture.” Journal of Political Economy: 83(4): 727756.Google Scholar
Smulders, S., van Soest, D. and Withagen, C.. 2004. “International Trade, Species Diversity, and Habitat Conservation.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 48: 891910.Google Scholar
Sokoloff, K.L. and Engerman, S.L.. 2000. “Institutions, Factor Endowments, and Paths of Development in the New World.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 14(3): 217232.Google Scholar
Solow, R.M. 1974. “Intergenerational Equity and Exhaustible Resources.” Review of Economic Studies 41(Symposium Issue): 2945.Google Scholar
Song, J. and Whittington, D.. 2004. “Why Have Some Countries on International Rivers Been Successful Negotiating Treaties? A Global Perspective.” Water Resources Research 40: 118.Google Scholar
Southey, C. 1978. “The Staples Thesis, Common Property and Homesteading.” Canadian Journal of Economics 11(3): 547559.Google Scholar
Southgate, D. 1990. “The Causes of Land Degradation along ‘Spontaneously’ Expanding Agricultural Frontiers in the Third World.” Land Economics 66(1): 93101.Google Scholar
Southgate, D. 1994. “Tropical Deforestation and Agricultural Development in Latin America.” In Brown, K. and Pearce, D.W. (eds.), The Causes of Tropical Deforestation: The Economic and Statistical Analysis of Factors Giving Rise to the Loss of the Tropical Forests. University College London Press, London, pp. 134145.Google Scholar
Sovacool, B.K. 2010. “The Political Economy of Oil and Gas in Southeast Asia: Heading towards the Natural Resource Curse?Pacific Review 23(2): 225229.Google Scholar
Stern, D.I. 2004. “The Rise and Fall of the Environmental Kuznets Curve.” World Development 32(8): 14191439.Google Scholar
Stern, D.I., Common, M.S. and Barbier, E.B.. 1996. “Economic Growth and Environmental Degradation: The Environmental Kuznets Curve and Sustainable Development.” World Development 24(7): 11511160.Google Scholar
Stevens, P. 2003. “Resource Impact: Curse or Blessing? A Literature Survey.” Journal of Energy Literature 9: 342.Google Scholar
Stiglitz, J.E. 1987. “Some Theoretical Aspects of Agricultural Policies.” World Bank Research Observer 2(1): 4353.Google Scholar
Stijns, J.-P.C. 2005. “Natural Resource Abundance and Economic Growth Revisited.” Resources Policy 30: 107130.Google Scholar
Stokey, N.L. 1998. “Are There Limits to Growth?International Economic Review 39: 131.Google Scholar
Stoop, N., Houssa, R. and Verpoorten, M.. 2016. “To Fish or Not to Fish? Resource Degradation and Income Diversification in Benin.” Environment and Development Economics 21: 669689.Google Scholar
Tajibaeva, L.S. 2012. “Property Rights, Renewable Resources and Economic Development.” Environmental and Resource Economics 51: 2341.Google Scholar
Takasaki, T. 2007. “Dynamic Household Models of Forest Clearing Under Distinct Land and Market Institutions: Can Agricultural Policies Reduce Tropical Deforestation?Environment and Development Economics 12: 423443.Google Scholar
Takasaki, Y., Barham, B.L. and Coomes, O.T.. 2004. “Risk Coping Strategies in Tropical Forests: Floods, Illness, and Resource Extraction.” Environment and Development Economics 9: 203224.Google Scholar
Taylor, A.M. and Williamson, J.G.. 1994. “Capital Flows to the New World as an Intergenerational Transfer.” Journal of Political Economy 102(2): 348371.Google Scholar
Thomas, D.H.L. and Adams, W.M.. 1999. “Adapting to Dams: Agrarian Change Downstream of the Tiga Dam, Norther Nigeria.” World Development 6: 919935.Google Scholar
Thompson, J.R. and Hollis, G.E.. 1995. “Hydrological Modelling and the Sustainable Development of the Hadeijia–Nguru Wetlands, Nigeria.” Hydrological Science Journal 40: 97116.Google Scholar
Tobey, J. and Torell, E.. 2006. “Coastal Poverty and MPA Management in Mainland Tanzania and Zanzibar.” Ocean & Coastal Management 49: 834854.Google Scholar
Toman, M.A., Pezzey, J.C.V. and Krautkramer, J.. 1995. “Neoclassical Economic Growth Theory and ‘Sustainability.” In Bromley, D. (ed.), The Handbook of Environmental Economics. Basil Blackwell, Oxford, pp. 139165.Google Scholar
Tornell, A. and Lane, P.R.. 1998. “Are Windfalls a Curse? A Non-Representative Agent Model of the Current Account.” Journal of International Economics 44: 83112.Google Scholar
Tornell, A. and Lane, P.R.. 1999. “The Voracity Effect.” American Economic Review 89: 2246.Google Scholar
Torvik, R. 2001. “Learning by Doing and the Dutch Disease.” European Economic Review 45(2): 285306.Google Scholar
Torvik, R. 2002. “Natural Resources, Rent Seeking and Welfare.” Journal of Development Economics 67: 455470.Google Scholar
Torvik, R. 2009. “Why Do Some Resource-Abundant Countries Succeed While Others Do Not?Oxford Review of Economic Policy 25(2): 241256.Google Scholar
Toynbee, A. 1978. Mankind and Mother Earth. Granada Publishing, London.Google Scholar
Tritsch, I. and Arvor, D.. 2016. “Transition in Environmental Governance in the Brazilian Amazon: Emergence of a New Pattern of Socio-economic Development and Deforestation.” Land Use Policy 59: 446455.Google Scholar
Turner, F.J. 1986. “The Significance of the Frontier in American History.” In Turner, F.J. (ed.), The Frontier in American History. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, pp. 138.Google Scholar
Turner, R.K. 1993. “Sustainability Principles and Practice.” In Turner, R.K. (ed.), Sustainable Environmental Management: Principles and Practice, 2nd ed. Belhaven Press, London, pp. 336.Google Scholar
Unger, D.H. and Siroros, P.. 2011. “Trying to Make Decisions Stick: Natural Resource Policy Making in Thailand.” Journal of Contemporary Asia 41(2): 206228.Google Scholar
United Nations. 2018. The Sustainable Development Goals Report 2018. United Nations, New York. https://unstats.un.org/sdgs/files/report/2018/TheSustainableDevelopmentGoalsReport2018-EN.pdf.Google Scholar
United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. 2014. World Urbanization Prospects: The 2014 Revision. United Nations, New York. https://esa.un.org/unpd/wup.Google Scholar
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). 2006. Human Development Report 2006. Beyond Scarcity: Power, Poverty and the Global Water Crisis. UNDP, New York.Google Scholar
United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD). 2017. The Global Land Outlook, 1st ed. UNCCD, Bonn.Google Scholar
van der Ploeg, F. 2011. “Natural Resources: Curse or Blessing?Journal of Economic Literature 49(2): 366420.Google Scholar
van der Ploeg, F. and Poelhekke, S.. 2010. “The Pungent Smell of ‘Red Herrings’: Subsoil Assets, Rents, Volatility and the Resource Curse.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 60: 4455.Google Scholar
Van Wijnbergen, S. 1984. “The ‘Dutch Disease’: A Disease after All?Economic Journal 94: 4155.Google Scholar
Vedeld, P., Angelsen, A., Bojö, J., Sjaastad, E. and Berg, G.K.. 2007. “Forest Environmental Incomes and the Rural Poor.” Forest Policy and Economics 9: 869879.Google Scholar
Venables, A.J. 2016. “Using Natural Resources for Development: Why Has It Proven So Difficult?Journal of Economic Perspectives 30: 161184.Google Scholar
Vincent, J.R. 1997. “Testing for Environmental Kuznets Curves within a Developing Country.” Environment and Development Economics 2(4): 417432.Google Scholar
Vincent, J.R., Ali, R.M. , C.Y. Tan, J. Yahaya, K.A. Rahim, L.T. Ghee, A.S. Meyer, M.S.H. Othman and G. Sivalingam. 1997. Environment and Development in a Resource-Rich Economy: Malaysia under the New Economic Policy. Harvard Institute for International Development, Harvard University Press, San Diego.Google Scholar
Vincent, J.R., Panayotou, T. and Hartwick, J.M.. 1997. “Resource Depletion and Sustainability in Small Open Economies.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 33: 274286.Google Scholar
Wahba, J. 1998. “The Transmission of Dutch Disease and Labour Migration.” Journal of International Trade and Economic Development 7(3): 355365.Google Scholar
Walker, R.T., Browder, J., Arima, E., Simmons, C., Pereira, R., Caldas, M., Shirota, R. and de Zen, S.. 2009. “Ranching and the New Global Range: Amazônia in the 21st Century.” Geoforum 40: 732745.Google Scholar
Wallerstein, I. 1974. The Modern World-System. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Watkins, M.H. 1963. “A Staple Theory of Economic Growth.” Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science 29(2): 141158.Google Scholar
Webb, W.P. 1964. The Great Frontier. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln.Google Scholar
Weinhold, D., Reis, E.J. and Molina Vale, P.. 2015. “Boom–Bust Patterns in the Brazilian Amazon.” Global Environmental Change 35: 391399.Google Scholar
Weitzman, M.L. 1976. “On the Welfare Significance of National Product in a Dynamic Economy.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 90(1): 156162.Google Scholar
Weitzman, M.L. 1997. “Sustainability and Technological Progress.” Scandinavian Journal of Economics 99: 113.Google Scholar
Weitzman, M.L. 1998. “On the Welfare Significance of National Product under Interest Rate Uncertainty.” European Economic Review 42(8): 15811594.Google Scholar
Whittington, D., Michael Hanemann, W., Sadoff, C. and Jeuland, M.. 2008. “The Challenge of Improving Water Sanitation Services in Less Developed Countries.” Foundations and Trends in Microeconomics 4(6–7): 469609.Google Scholar
Wicke, B., Sikkema, R., Dornburg, V. and Faaij, A.. 2011. “Exploring Land Use Changes and the Role of Palm Oil Production in Indonesia and Malaysia.” Land Use Policy 28: 193206.Google Scholar
Wirl, F. 1999. “De- and Reforestation: Stability, Instability and Limit Cycles.” Environmental and Resource Economics 14: 463479.Google Scholar
Wolfersberger, J., Delacote, P. and Garcia, S.. 2015. “An Empirical Analysis of Forest Transition and Land-Use Change in Developing Countries.” Ecological Economics 119: 241251.Google Scholar
Wood, A. and Berge, K.. 1997. “Exporting Manufactures: Human Resources, Natural Resources, and Trade Policy.” Journal of Development Studies 34(1): 3559.Google Scholar
Wood, A. and Mayer, J.. 2001. “Africa’s Export Structure in a Comparative Perspective.” Cambridge Journal of Economics 25: 369394.Google Scholar
Wood, A. and Ridao-Cano, C.. 1999. “Skill, Trade and International Inequality.” Oxford Economic Papers 51: 89119.Google Scholar
World Bank. 1992. World Development Report 1992. World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
World Bank. 2003. World Development Report 2003. World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
World Bank. 2008. World Development Report 2008: Agricultural Development. World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
World Bank. 2018. World Development Indictors. World Bank, Washington DC. https://datacatalog.worldbank.org/dataset/world-development-indicators.Google Scholar
World Commission on Environment and Development (WCED). 1987. Our Common Future. Oxford University Press, Oxford and New York.Google Scholar
Wright, G. 1990. “The Origins of American Industrial Success, 1879–1940.” American Economic Review 80(4): 651668.Google Scholar
Wright, G. and Czelusta, J.. 2004. “Why Economies Slow: The Myth of the Resource Curse.” Challenge 47(2): 638.Google Scholar
Wunder, S. 2001. “Poverty Alleviation and Tropical Forests – What Scope for Synergies?World Development 29: 18171833.Google Scholar
Wunder, S. 2003. Oil Wealth and the Fate of the Forest: A Comparative Study of Eight Tropical Countries. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Wunder, S., Börner, J., Shively, G. and Wyman, M.. 2014. “Safety Nets, Gap Filling and Forests: A Global-Comparative Perspective.” World Development 64: S29S42.Google Scholar
Yamano, T. and Kijima, Y.. 2010. “The Association of Soil Fertility and Market Access with Household Income: Evidence from Rural Uganda.” Food Policy 35: 5159.Google Scholar
Zeller, M., Schreider, G., von Braun, J. and Heidhues, F. 1997. Rural Finance for Food Security for the Poor. Food Policy Review No. 4. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Zhang, X. and Fan, S.. 2004. “How Productive Is Infrastructure? A New Approach and Evidence from Rural India.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 86: 494501.Google Scholar
Ziesemer, T. 1995. “Economic Development and Endogenous Terms-of-Trade Determination: Review and Reinterpretation of the Prebisch–Singer Thesis.” UNCTAD Review 6: 1733.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • References
  • Edward B. Barbier, Colorado State University
  • Book: Natural Resources and Economic Development
  • Online publication: 31 August 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316875681.012
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • References
  • Edward B. Barbier, Colorado State University
  • Book: Natural Resources and Economic Development
  • Online publication: 31 August 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316875681.012
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • References
  • Edward B. Barbier, Colorado State University
  • Book: Natural Resources and Economic Development
  • Online publication: 31 August 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316875681.012
Available formats
×