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      Effectiveness of regulatory policy in curbing deforestation in a biodiversity hotspot

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      Environmental Research Letters
      IOP Publishing

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          The Millennium Drought in southeast Australia (2001-2009): Natural and human causes and implications for water resources, ecosystems, economy, and society

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            Measuring the effectiveness of protected area networks in reducing deforestation.

            Global efforts to reduce tropical deforestation rely heavily on the establishment of protected areas. Measuring the effectiveness of these areas is difficult because the amount of deforestation that would have occurred in the absence of legal protection cannot be directly observed. Conventional methods of evaluating the effectiveness of protected areas can be biased because protection is not randomly assigned and because protection can induce deforestation spillovers (displacement) to neighboring forests. We demonstrate that estimates of effectiveness can be substantially improved by controlling for biases along dimensions that are observable, measuring spatial spillovers, and testing the sensitivity of estimates to potential hidden biases. We apply matching methods to evaluate the impact on deforestation of Costa Rica's renowned protected-area system between 1960 and 1997. We find that protection reduced deforestation: approximately 10% of the protected forests would have been deforested had they not been protected. Conventional approaches to evaluating conservation impact, which fail to control for observable covariates correlated with both protection and deforestation, substantially overestimate avoided deforestation (by over 65%, based on our estimates). We also find that deforestation spillovers from protected to unprotected forests are negligible. Our conclusions are robust to potential hidden bias, as well as to changes in modeling assumptions. Our results show that, with appropriate empirical methods, conservation scientists and policy makers can better understand the relationships between human and natural systems and can use this to guide their attempts to protect critical ecosystem services.
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              THE ESTIMATION OF CAUSAL EFFECTS FROM OBSERVATIONAL DATA

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Environmental Research Letters
                Environ. Res. Lett.
                IOP Publishing
                1748-9326
                December 01 2018
                November 23 2018
                : 13
                : 12
                : 124003
                Article
                10.1088/1748-9326/aae7f9
                8e0a8eca-5497-4b32-a691-a5bd5c8ec060
                © 2018

                http://iopscience.iop.org/info/page/text-and-data-mining

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

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