Paper park performance: Mexico's natural protected areas in the 1990s
Abstract
© 2014 Elsevier Ltd.Although developing countries have established scores of new protected
areas over the past three decades, they often amount to little more than "paper parks"
that are chronically short of the financial, human, and technical resources needed
for effective management. It is not clear whether and how severely under-resourced
parks affect deforestation. In principle, they could either stem it by, for example,
creating an expectation of future enforcement, or they could spur it by, for example,
creating open access regimes. We examine the effect of Mexico's natural protected
areas (NPAs) on deforestation from 1993 to 2000, a period when forest clearing was
rampant and the vast majority of protected areas had negligible resources or management.
We use high-resolution satellite data to measure deforestation and (covariate and
propensity score) matching to control for NPAs' nonrandom siting and for spillovers.
Our broad finding is that Mexico's paper parks had heterogeneous effects both inside
and outside their borders. More specifically, at the national-level, we cannot reject
the null hypothesis that NPAs had zero average effect on clearing inside their borders,
nor can we reject a similar hypothesis for spillover clearing outside their borders.
However, we can detect statistically and economically significant inside- and outside-NPA
effects for certain geographic regions. Moreover, these effects have different signs
depending on the region. Finally, we find that NPAs with certain characteristics were
more effective at stemming deforestation inside their borders, namely, those that
were large, new, mixed use, and relatively well-funded. Taken together, these results
suggest that paper parks have the potential to either reduce or exacerbate tropical
deforestation and highlight the need for further research on the conditions that lead
to each outcome.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/12713Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2014.12.004Publication Info
Blackman, A; Pfaff, A; & Robalino, J (2015). Paper park performance: Mexico's natural protected areas in the 1990s. Global Environmental Change, 31. pp. 50-61. 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2014.12.004. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/12713.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Alexander Pfaff
Professor in the Sanford School of Public Policy
Alex Pfaff is a Professor of Public Policy, Economics and Environment at Duke University.
He studies how economic development affects and is affected by natural resources and
the environment. His focus is on the impacts of conservation policies (such as protected
areas, ecoservices payments, and certifications) and development policies (such as
roads and rights). Those impacts are functions of choices by individuals and communities
that affect land use, water quantity and quality, human exposure

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