Changes in land use are believed to play an important role in society in most parts of the world, and these areas tend to be overlooked. Because land use change is large between different regions, they will bring something of a change to society. These land use changes have brought about changes in many communities that changed the lives of many people. One of the largest and most widely discussed topics in the land use change is deforestation, which is an important role both as an export measure and as a form of indigenous people's employment in many indigenous societies Has been played.
Deforestation is mainly defined as deforestation for large-scale human land use. Forest destruction has become very active in the past few decades. As Apan and Anderson (1998) stated, "deforestation of tropical land has become an important issue worldwide. On the global scale, the problem of loss of biodiversity and artificial greenhouse effect is a big problem This is the subject of international discussion. "(P. 137) During the past few decades developers did not understand the effects of uncontrolled deforestation, so in the past decade forests It led to a serious shortage of. Forest logging has various effects such as drought, climate change, animal and plant extinction, water production reduction, global warming, greenhouse gas emissions. The impact of these deforestation can cause serious damage in the region, region, and on a global scale.
Therefore deforestation has many negative effects. However, forests bring a number of important economic benefits in respect of timber harvesting and land resources. Forest destruction benefits are often more prominent than negative ones and some governments are promoting deforestation there by providing economic subsidies to agriculture. Since the possibility of slowing the rate of deforestation is very low, the best approach may be to make it sustainable and replace timber with new growth of wood.
Forest logging can adversely affect the environment. The most dramatic impact is the loss of hundreds of species of habitat. Eighty percent of the earth's land, the flora and fauna live in the forest, and many people can not survive deforestation destroying their homes. Forest destruction also promotes climate change
Property rights have various influences on the relationship between poverty and deforestation. In the case of primitive traditional communities and transitional communities, the ownership of the two communities against their land indicates that it slows down the rate of deforestation in the tropical rain forest of southeast Cameroon. However, the conversion to other ownership or co-ownership of other communities does not use these rights to promote forest protection. Poverty does not necessarily lead to deforestation, and logically this should be our conclusion. However, it is exaggeration to extend the results of a limited case study to a very wide field. However, it is controversial that the relevance of poverty and deforestation should be determined on a case-by-case basis. Our main contribution is to design a new analytical framework and to elucidate the mechanism behind the connection between so-called poverty and deforestation. Five related factors were identified