Tea pickers at work in Pangkalan Limus village, Mount Halimun Salak National Park, West Java, Indonesia.
Photo by Aulia Erlangga/CIFOR
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Keywords:
tea plantation, globalization, farm area, forest management, multiple land use, nontimber forest products, right of access, agricultural products, household expenditure, agroforestry systems, government policy, private sector, deforestation, climate change, private forestry, tenure systems, forestry law, economics, women health, agribusiness, agroforestry, production, systematic review, poverty alleviation, gender relations, forestry, forest policy, land tenure, land use, stakeholders, CIFOR, plantations, households, investments, West Java, food availability, community forestry, living conditions, household income, food production, ecosystem services, rural population, rural communities, forest communities, multiple use forestry, women, national park, land use planning, income, social welfare, basic needs, Indonesia, food crops, Halimun Salak, property rights, livelihoods, crops, agricultural production, tea picker, environmental management, environmental legislation, private ownership, Java, forest plantations, horizontal, citizen participation, food consumption, conservation, socioeconomics.