Journal Article

Indigenous land rights and deforestation: Evidence from the Brazilian Amazon

Date Published

Nov 1, 2017

Authors

Ariel BenYishay, Silke Heuser, Daniel Runfola, Rachel Trichler

Publisher

Journal of Environmental Economics and Management

Citation

Benyishay, A., Heuser, S., Runfola, D., & Trichler, R. (2017). Indigenous land rights and deforestation: Evidence from the Brazilian Amazon. Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 86, 29-47. doi:10.1016/j.jeem.2017.07.008

Note: A version of this article was previously published as an AidData Working Paper.

Abstract

Concerns over the expropriation of and encroachment on indigenous communities' lands have led to greater formalization of these communities' rights in a number of developing countries. We study whether formalization of indigenous communities' land rights affects the rate of deforestation in both the short and medium terms. Beginning in 1995, the Government of Brazil formalized the rights of several hundred indigenous communities whose lands cover more than 40 million hectares in the Amazon region and provided support for these rightsÕ enforcement. We study the program's impacts using a long time-series of satellite-based forest cover data. Using both plausibly exogenous variation in the timing of formalization and matched samples of treated and comparison communities, we find no effect of these protections on satellite-based greenness measures. This is true even for communities that received support for surveillance and enforcement of these rights. Notably, we observe low counterfactual rates of deforestation on communities' lands between 1982 and 2010, suggesting that indigenous land rights programs should not uniformly be justified on the basis of their forest protection, at least in the medium term.

Featured Authors

Ariel BenYishay
Research & Evaluation

Ariel BenYishay

Chief Economist, Director of Research and Evaluation

Dan Runfola
Research & Evaluation

Dan Runfola

Senior Geospatial Scientist

Rachel Trichler
Research & Evaluation

Rachel Trichler

Senior Research Analyst

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