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Bibliothèque Illegal Logging in Indonesia, South East Asia and International Consumption of Illegally Sourced Timber

Illegal Logging in Indonesia, South East Asia and International Consumption of Illegally Sourced Timber

Illegal Logging in Indonesia, South East Asia and International Consumption of Illegally Sourced Timber

Resource information

Date of publication
Août 2001
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
OBL:48899

The result of in-depth research and extensive on-the-ground investigations, the report exposes the scale of illegal logging and illegal timber trade in East Asia with a special focus on Indonesia. The report also highlights the role played by major tropical timber consuming nations including the US, Europe, Japan and China in driving illegal logging by providing a ready market for illegally sourced timber and timber products. In many of the countries of South-East Asia illegal logging outstrips legal logging, and large quantities of this timber finds its way
to the international markets either direct or via neighbouring countries which often act as laundering points. The destruction
wrought by this commercial scale illegal logging, much of it in National Parks, is resulting in rapidly diminishing forests across the
region and is pushing many species including the Orang-utan, Asia's only Great Ape, closer to extinction.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Dave Currey
Faith Doherty
Sam Lawson
Julian Newman
A. Ruwindrijarto.

Geographical focus