The Poverty and Environment Network (PEN) is an international research project and network. Launched in 2004, PEN is the largest and most comprehensive global analysis of tropical forests and poverty. The study sites were chosen to obtain widely representative coverage of different geographical regions, forest types, forest tenure regimes, levels of poverty, infrastructure and market access, and population density. Brazil nut collection trip in the Chico Mendes Extractive Reserve in Acre, Brazil, 2006.
Photo by Amy Duchelle/CIFOR
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Keywords:
Activity, Latin America, Livelihoods, South America, Forest Management, Multiple Land Use, Nontimber Forest Products, Household Expenditure, Private Sector, REGIONS, Environmental Legislation, Livelihood, Private Forestry, PEN, Tenure Systems, Forestry Law, Small Businesses, Boy, Males, Man, Food, Forest Resources, Poverty Alleviation, Work, Men, Decentralization, Forest Policy, Land Tenure, Stakeholders, CIFOR, Verticals, Forests, Poverty And Environment Network, Child, Sustainability, Brazil, Community Forestry, Household Income, Policy, Income, Natural Resources, Bertholletia Excelsa, Ecosystem Services, People, Harvesting, Nuts, Environmental Management, Private Ownership, Tropical Forests, ACTIVITIES/ACTION, Male, Rainforests, Socioeconomics, IMAGE/COLOR/STYLE/FORMAT, Working.