Articles | Volume 78, issue 2
https://doi.org/10.5194/gh-78-255-2023
https://doi.org/10.5194/gh-78-255-2023
Standard article
 | 
17 May 2023
Standard article |  | 17 May 2023

Framing REDD+: political ecology, actor–network theory (ANT), and the making of forest carbon markets

Juliane Miriam Schumacher

Viewed

Total article views: 825 (including HTML, PDF, and XML)
HTML PDF XML Total BibTeX EndNote
563 219 43 825 16 22
  • HTML: 563
  • PDF: 219
  • XML: 43
  • Total: 825
  • BibTeX: 16
  • EndNote: 22
Views and downloads (calculated since 17 May 2023)
Cumulative views and downloads (calculated since 17 May 2023)

Viewed (geographical distribution)

Total article views: 809 (including HTML, PDF, and XML) Thereof 809 with geography defined and 0 with unknown origin.
Country # Views %
  • 1
1
 
 
 
 

Cited

Latest update: 13 Dec 2024
Download
Short summary
New theoretical approaches like actor–network theory have become influential in human geography, questioning previous approaches to addressing human–environment relations. In this paper, I use the example of a controversial, forest-based climate protection scheme, REDD+, to show how these approaches are changing research foci and practices – from an analysis of the neoliberalization of nature to the making of markets and from the effects on human users to those on non-humans.