The bioeconomy and non-timber forest products (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Smith-Hall, Carsten; Chamberlain, James
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The bioeconomy and non-timber forest products (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Smith-Hall, Carsten; Chamberlain, James
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The Bioeconomy and Non-Timber Forest Products provides the first investigation into the role of these products in supporting a transition from business-as-usual to a forest-based bioeconomy.
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The Bioeconomy and Non-Timber Forest Products provides the first investigation into the role of these products in supporting a transition from business-as-usual to a forest-based bioeconomy.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 298
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Dezember 2022
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000787771
- Artikelnr.: 66305891
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 298
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Dezember 2022
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000787771
- Artikelnr.: 66305891
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Carsten Smith-Hall is a Professor in Forest and People in Developing Countries in the Department of Food and Resource Economics at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. He co-coordinates the Global Task Force on Unlocking the Bioeconomy and Non-Timber Forest Products and serves the World Conservation Union's Medicinal Plant Specialist Group. James L. Chamberlain is a Research Forest Products Technologist for the US Forest Service and an Adjunct Faculty member in the Department of Sustainable Biomaterials at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, USA. He co-coordinates the Global Task Force on Unlocking the Bioeconomy and Non-Timber Forest Products.
Introduction 1. Why focus on non-timber forest products in the bioeconomy?
Part 1: Where are we - the starting point 2. Non-timber forest products and
the European bioeconomy: status and transition pathways 3. Non-timber
forest products in Canada: their role in bioeconomy 4. Commercial fungi,
indigenous communities, and the bioeconomy transition in Southwest China 5.
The potential for using non-timber forest products to develop the Brazilian
bioeconomy 6. Informal markets, marginal populations, and the bioeconomy -
the success story of açaí (Euterpe oleracea Mart.) in the Guiana Shield 7.
Lessons for the forest-based bioeconomy from non-timber forest products in
Mexico 8. Non-timber forest products and bioeconomy transitioning in
Cameroon: potentials and challenges Part 2: How do we move on - specific
examples 9. An operational transition pathway to a forest-based bioeconomy:
lessons from the wild-simulated ginseng industry 10. The potential of
non-timber forest products to contribute to the bioeconomy transition: the
example of baobab (Adansonia digitata L.) in Malawi 11. A framework
supporting the transition to a forest-based bioeconomy and its application
to Nepal 12. A national-level approach to integrating non-timber forest
products and the bioeconomy: the example of Argentina Part 3: Helpful tools
and technologies - tricks of the trade 13. Forest management for
sustainable sourcing of non-timber forest products in a bioeconomy 14.
Mediterranean stone pine production systems and the emerging bioeconomy in
Chile 15. Participatory GIS applications for wild berry utilisation and the
Finnish bioeconomy Conclusion 16. The keys to unlocking the bioeconomy with
non-timber forest products
Part 1: Where are we - the starting point 2. Non-timber forest products and
the European bioeconomy: status and transition pathways 3. Non-timber
forest products in Canada: their role in bioeconomy 4. Commercial fungi,
indigenous communities, and the bioeconomy transition in Southwest China 5.
The potential for using non-timber forest products to develop the Brazilian
bioeconomy 6. Informal markets, marginal populations, and the bioeconomy -
the success story of açaí (Euterpe oleracea Mart.) in the Guiana Shield 7.
Lessons for the forest-based bioeconomy from non-timber forest products in
Mexico 8. Non-timber forest products and bioeconomy transitioning in
Cameroon: potentials and challenges Part 2: How do we move on - specific
examples 9. An operational transition pathway to a forest-based bioeconomy:
lessons from the wild-simulated ginseng industry 10. The potential of
non-timber forest products to contribute to the bioeconomy transition: the
example of baobab (Adansonia digitata L.) in Malawi 11. A framework
supporting the transition to a forest-based bioeconomy and its application
to Nepal 12. A national-level approach to integrating non-timber forest
products and the bioeconomy: the example of Argentina Part 3: Helpful tools
and technologies - tricks of the trade 13. Forest management for
sustainable sourcing of non-timber forest products in a bioeconomy 14.
Mediterranean stone pine production systems and the emerging bioeconomy in
Chile 15. Participatory GIS applications for wild berry utilisation and the
Finnish bioeconomy Conclusion 16. The keys to unlocking the bioeconomy with
non-timber forest products
Introduction 1. Why focus on non-timber forest products in the bioeconomy?
Part 1: Where are we - the starting point 2. Non-timber forest products and
the European bioeconomy: status and transition pathways 3. Non-timber
forest products in Canada: their role in bioeconomy 4. Commercial fungi,
indigenous communities, and the bioeconomy transition in Southwest China 5.
The potential for using non-timber forest products to develop the Brazilian
bioeconomy 6. Informal markets, marginal populations, and the bioeconomy -
the success story of açaí (Euterpe oleracea Mart.) in the Guiana Shield 7.
Lessons for the forest-based bioeconomy from non-timber forest products in
Mexico 8. Non-timber forest products and bioeconomy transitioning in
Cameroon: potentials and challenges Part 2: How do we move on - specific
examples 9. An operational transition pathway to a forest-based bioeconomy:
lessons from the wild-simulated ginseng industry 10. The potential of
non-timber forest products to contribute to the bioeconomy transition: the
example of baobab (Adansonia digitata L.) in Malawi 11. A framework
supporting the transition to a forest-based bioeconomy and its application
to Nepal 12. A national-level approach to integrating non-timber forest
products and the bioeconomy: the example of Argentina Part 3: Helpful tools
and technologies - tricks of the trade 13. Forest management for
sustainable sourcing of non-timber forest products in a bioeconomy 14.
Mediterranean stone pine production systems and the emerging bioeconomy in
Chile 15. Participatory GIS applications for wild berry utilisation and the
Finnish bioeconomy Conclusion 16. The keys to unlocking the bioeconomy with
non-timber forest products
Part 1: Where are we - the starting point 2. Non-timber forest products and
the European bioeconomy: status and transition pathways 3. Non-timber
forest products in Canada: their role in bioeconomy 4. Commercial fungi,
indigenous communities, and the bioeconomy transition in Southwest China 5.
The potential for using non-timber forest products to develop the Brazilian
bioeconomy 6. Informal markets, marginal populations, and the bioeconomy -
the success story of açaí (Euterpe oleracea Mart.) in the Guiana Shield 7.
Lessons for the forest-based bioeconomy from non-timber forest products in
Mexico 8. Non-timber forest products and bioeconomy transitioning in
Cameroon: potentials and challenges Part 2: How do we move on - specific
examples 9. An operational transition pathway to a forest-based bioeconomy:
lessons from the wild-simulated ginseng industry 10. The potential of
non-timber forest products to contribute to the bioeconomy transition: the
example of baobab (Adansonia digitata L.) in Malawi 11. A framework
supporting the transition to a forest-based bioeconomy and its application
to Nepal 12. A national-level approach to integrating non-timber forest
products and the bioeconomy: the example of Argentina Part 3: Helpful tools
and technologies - tricks of the trade 13. Forest management for
sustainable sourcing of non-timber forest products in a bioeconomy 14.
Mediterranean stone pine production systems and the emerging bioeconomy in
Chile 15. Participatory GIS applications for wild berry utilisation and the
Finnish bioeconomy Conclusion 16. The keys to unlocking the bioeconomy with
non-timber forest products