Title Information
Title
Conservation and Economic Geography in the Amazon Rainforest and Other Essays on Development Economics
Type of Resource (primo)
dissertations
Name: Personal
Name Part
Tsuda, Shunsuke
Role
Role Term: Text
creator
Name: Personal
Name Part
Foster, Andrew
Role
Role Term: Text
Advisor
Name: Personal
Name Part
Turner, Matthew
Role
Role Term: Text
Reader
Name: Personal
Name Part
Bjorkegren, Daniel
Role
Role Term: Text
Reader
Name: Corporate
Name Part
Brown University. Department of Economics
Role
Role Term: Text
sponsor
Origin Information
Copyright Date
2023
Physical Description
Extent
xvi, 316 p.
digitalOrigin
born digital
Note: thesis
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Brown University, 2023
Genre (aat)
theses
Abstract
This dissertation studies economic geography, environment, and political economy issues in developing countries. Chapter 1 studies the conservation of tropical forests. To derive policies that balance human and ecological well-being, we estimate a multi-sector spatial model that formalizes human-nature interactions using high-resolution georeferenced data from roadless river basins in the Peruvian Amazon and plausibly exogenous variation in the structure of river networks. The estimated agglomeration externality in agricultural production outweighs dispersion forces in access to land, implying that higher concentration leads to higher productivity with less deforestation per farmer. We also find a strong congestion externality with spatial spillovers in natural resource extraction. The agglomeration externality, primarily driven by economies of scale in transport technology and agricultural intensification, generates large welfare and forest cover gains but leads to natural resource depletion through general equilibrium effects. Counterfactuals demonstrate that combining well-targeted protection policies and transport infrastructure can simultaneously achieve higher welfare, lower deforestation, and less natural resource depletion. Chapter 2 uncovers the evolution of cities and Islamist insurgencies, in the process of the reversal of fortune over the centuries. In West Africa, water access in ancient periods predicts the locations of the core cities of the trans-Saharan caravan routes founded up to the 1800s, when historical Islamic states played significant economic roles. Employing an instrumental variable strategy, we show that these landlocked pre-colonial core cities, which contracted after European colonization along with the constant shrinking of water sources, have today been replaced by battlefields for jihadist organizations. We argue that the power relations between Islamic states and the European military during the colonial era shaped the persistence of jihadist ideology as a legacy of colonization. Chapter 3 shows that refugee inflows cause market-specific gains and losses for host farmers by combining a canonical agricultural household model, the natural experimental setting of mass refugee inflows into Tanzania in the early 1990s, and longitudinal panel data from the host economy. The refugee inflows have increased the surplus farm labor. They have also enhanced the crop marketization of subsistence farmers and the impact of hosting refugees lasts long even after refugees have left camps.
Subject (fast) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/00891767")
Topic
Development economics
Subject
Topic
Political Economy
Subject (fast) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/00912895")
Topic
Environmental economics
Subject (fast) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/00901962")
Topic
Economic geography
Subject (fast) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/00875502")
Topic
Conservation of natural resources
Language
Language Term (ISO639-2B)
English
Record Information
Record Content Source (marcorg)
RPB
Record Creation Date (encoding="iso8601")
20230602