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Dive into the research topics where Laura Bouriaud is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura Bouriaud.


Small-scale Forestry | 2005

Causes of illegal logging in Central and Eastern Europe

Laura Bouriaud

A study has been undertaken to investigate the extent to which poverty is a determinant (final cause) of illegal logging, and to identify valid short-term policy variables for the control of illegal logging in Central and Eastern European (CEE) countries. The study identifies the main features of illegal logging and forest-related and rural-related conditions in the CEE region, and uses principal components analysis and cluster analysis to obtain a typology of the CEE region according to the above conditions. Regional differences within Lithuania and Romania are specifically examined. The analysis reveals that the occurrence of illegal logging is explained by poverty, but also by the reform on land ownership and by weak law enforcement. Implications of these results for policies to cope with the illegal logging phenomenon are discussed.


Small-scale Forestry | 2007

Innovation Processes in Forest-related Recreation Services: The Role of Public and Private Resources in Different Institutional Backgrounds

Gerhard Weiss; Suzanne Martin; Anne Matilainen; Birger Vennesland; Carmen Nastase; Erlend Nybakk; Laura Bouriaud

This article examines innovation processes in forest recreational services on the basis of case studies in five European countries with differing institutional backgrounds of forest ownership and access rights. The analysis reveals that forest-related recreation services are developed under varying institutional conditions and on public as well as private land. Ideas for innovations in recreational services may come from within but often outside the forestry sector. Financing is provided from public and private sources. Both public and private spheres have important roles in providing natural, human and financial resources and usually a network of public and private actors are involved in innovation processes. Of particular importance are cross-sectoral interactions between forestry and tourism. Greater institutional support is needed for the development of forest-related recreation services because the field is at an early stage of development. It is concluded that support should focus on providing ideas and financial resources for product development and on facilitating cross-sectoral interaction between forestry and tourism actors. A particular need is seen for development of models for durable interaction between land owners and tourism operators on a regional scale.


Small-scale Forestry | 2007

Property Rights Characteristics Relevant for Innovation and Enterprise Development in Small-scale Forestry

Laura Bouriaud

In this paper, the property rights system (PR) in small-scale forestry in Europe is analysed in relationship to enterprise and innovation development. The paper applies the theory of property rights to distinguish four criteria relevant for enterprise and innovation development: security of rights, definition of the content, transferability of the rights and owners’ participation in the definition of rules for forest management. The description of the PR systems in the national COST Action E30 reports has been used as empirical data to illustrate some barriers to enterprise development according to the four selected criteria. Two categories of rearrangements in the PR systems in favour of innovation were identified: the partition of property rights amongst different users and the public allocation of rights over resource utilisation.


Regional Environmental Change | 2015

Institutional factors and opportunities for adapting European forest management to climate change

Laura Bouriaud; Mariella Marzano; Manfred J. Lexer; Liviu Nichiforel; Christopher Reyer; Christian Temperli; Heli Peltola; Ché Elkin; Gabriel Duduman; Philip G. Taylor; Stephen Bathgate; José G. Borges; Sandra Clerkx; Jordi Garcia-Gonzalo; Carlos Gracia; Geerten M. Hengeveld; Seppo Kellomäki; Georgi Kostov; Michael Maroschek; Bart Muys; Gert-Jan Nabuurs; Bruce C. Nicoll; Marc Palahí; Werner Rammer; Duncan Ray; Mart-Jan Schelhaas; Louise Sing; Margarida Tomé; Juergen Zell; Marc Hanewinkel

Abstract Despite the fact that the institutional environment is acknowledged to influence the implementation of regional adaptations of forest management to climate change, there are few empirical studies addressing the institutional factors and opportunities of adaptation. Using Ostrom’s institutional analysis and development framework, we aimed to identify : (1) the critical and distinctive characteristics of the forest resource and institutional context that may determine how climate change-adaptive forest management measures are implemented and (2) the opportunities for implementing the planned adaptation measures. The analysis is performed on ten European case study regions which differed in many resource-dependent factors, policy arena factors and incentives for changes. The main factors influencing the adaptation are the ownership pattern, the level of policy formation and the nature of forest goods and services. Opportunities for adaptation are driven by the openness of the forest management planning processes to the stakeholders participation, the degree to which business as usual management is projected to be non-satisfactory in the future, and by the number and nature of obstacles to adaptation. Promoting local self-governance mechanisms and the participation of the external stakeholders in forest management planning or in the regional forest or climate change policy adaptation may be a way of overcoming path dependency, behavioural obstacles and potential policy failures in implementing adaptation. The study argues that both climate change belief systems and political participation are important to explain adaptation to climate change when multiple decision-making levels are at stake.


Regional Environmental Change | 2015

Age-class disequilibrium as an opportunity for adaptive forest management in the Carpathian Mountains, Romania

Laura Bouriaud; Olivier Bouriaud; Ché Elkin; Christian Temperli; Christopher Reyer; Gabriel Duduman; Ionuţ Barnoaiea; Liviu Nichiforel; Niklaus E. Zimmermann; Harald Bugmann

Biomass and species composition of a forest district in the North-Eastern Carpathian Mountains were simulated until 2100 using the forest landscape model LandClim, driven by climate data from three general circulation models that projected the local climate change under the A1B emission scenario. Four different management scenarios were used: business as usual and three adaptive management scenarios characterized by an intensification of interventions: more intense thinnings and shorter rotations. The total biomass at the end of the simulation differed greatly according to the climate scenario but was comparatively much less influenced by the management scenarios. Forest biomass was projected to increase markedly under the model which forecast the lowest climate change (CCSM3), remained approximately constant in the intermediate climate model (ECHAM5) but decreased severely in the hypothesis of the largest climate changes (HadCM3). Our results showed that developments in species composition differed much more between climate change scenarios than between management scenarios. Under moderate and intermediate climate scenarios, changes in species composition occurred principally in harvested stands, while stands not harvested did not display species replacements. Under extreme climate change (HadCM3) on the other hand, the species change occurred even before harvest. The model projections highlight the inadequacy of some species for the new growing and regeneration conditions that accompany the extreme climate scenario. Harvesting can be seen as a chance to undergo active adaptation with respect to species composition.


Annals of Forest Research | 2013

Governance of private forests in Eastern and Central Europe: an analysis of forest harvesting and management rights.

Laura Bouriaud; Liviu Nichiforel; Gerhard Weiss; Agron Bajraktari; Milic Curovic; Zuzana Dobšinská; Predrag Glavonjić; Vilém Jarský; Zuzana Sarvašová; Meelis Teder; Zinta Zalite


Annals of Forest Research | 2014

Ungulate browsing causes species loss in deciduous forests independent of community dynamics and silvicultural management in Central and Southeastern Europe

Ernst-Detlef Schulze; Olivier Bouriaud; Jana Wäldchen; Nico Eisenhauer; Helge Walentowski; Carolin Seele; Eric Heinze; Ulrich Pruschitzki; G. Dănilă; Gheorghe Marin; Dominik Hessenmöller; Laura Bouriaud; M. Teodosiu


Web Ecology | 2014

Opinion Paper: Forest management and biodiversity

Ernst-Detlef Schulze; Laura Bouriaud; H. Bussler; Martin M. Gossner; Helge Walentowski; Dominik Hessenmöller; Olivier Bouriaud; K. v. Gadow


Land Use Policy | 2018

How private are Europe’s private forests? A comparative property rights analysis

Liviu Nichiforel; Kevin Keary; Philippe Deuffic; Gerhard Weiss; Bo Jellesmark Thorsen; Georg Winkel; Mersudin Avdibegović; Zuzana Dobšinská; Diana Feliciano; Paola Gatto; Elena Gorriz Mifsud; Marjanke A. Hoogstra-Klein; Michal Hrib; Teppo Hujala; Laszlo Jager; Vilém Jarský; Krzysztof Jodłowski; Anna Lawrence; Diana Lukmine; Špela Pezdevšek Malovrh; Jelena Nedeljkovic; Dragan Nonic; Silvija Krajter Ostoić; Klaus Pukall; Jacques Rondeux; Theano Samara; Zuzana Sarvašová; Ramona Elena Scriban; Rita Šilingienė; Milan Sinko


Journal of Rural Studies | 2017

Understanding private forest owners’ conceptualisation of forest management: Evidence from a survey in seven European countries

Diana Feliciano; Laura Bouriaud; Élodie Brahic; Philippe Deuffic; Zuzana Dobšinská; Vilem Jarsky; Anna Lawrence; Erlend Nybakk; Sonia Quiroga; Cristina Suárez; Andrej Ficko

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Olivier Bouriaud

Ştefan cel Mare University of Suceava

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Erlend Nybakk

Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute

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Carmen Nastase

Ştefan cel Mare University of Suceava

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Christopher Reyer

Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research

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K. v. Gadow

University of Göttingen

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Vilem Jarsky

Czech University of Life Sciences Prague

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Vilém Jarský

Czech University of Life Sciences Prague

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