Fighting poverty while preserving forests: new research aims to balance economic gains and environmental conservation
Initiatives aimed at fighting poverty in low-income countries have achieved significant progress, cutting extreme poverty globally by more than 65 percent since 1990, according to the World Bank. Yet amid their economic benefits, many poverty reduction programs also cause environmental damage, leading to deforestation and air and water pollution. These adverse effects, which exacerbate existing economic inequalities, are felt most acutely by populations living in and near forests.
Recognizing that economic and environmental well-being are connected, an interdisciplinary team of Notre Dame researchers is studying the effectiveness of poverty reduction programs in rural areas in the Global South and identifying interventions that can alleviate poverty while conserving the environment. Countries in the Global South are home to 90 percent of the 600 million people who live in extreme poverty, subsisting on less than $2.15 per day.
“There’s a real need for evidence that shows the relationship between economic and environmental impacts,” said Daniel C. Miller, an environmental policy expert and the Coyle Mission Collegiate Associate Professor in the Keough School of Global Affairs. “An increasingly degraded natural environment makes it more difficult to sustain human well-being and increases the risk of people falling deeper into poverty.”
The project is funded by Notre Dame’s Poverty Initiative, a University-wide effort to create a world intolerant of poverty by expanding knowledge about how to solve it. Joining Miller as primary investigators are geographer Ellis Adams, political scientist Krister Andersson and economist Lakshmi Iyer. All four researchers are core affiliate faculty members of the Pulte Institute for Global Development, part of Notre Dame’s Keough School of Global Affairs.
“The interdisciplinary expertise of this group enables us to study these issues in a holistic manner, using both quantitative and qualitative methods and a variety of data sources,” Iyer said. “While my expertise is in poverty alleviation and quantitative methods, my colleagues are experts on forest conservation, survey design, remote sensing data, systematic literature reviews and qualitative analysis. Collaborating with them has been a great learning experience so far.”
Drawing on their diverse geographical expertise and field experience, the researchers will focus on tropical forest regions in three countries: India, Ghana and Peru. Working closely with local communities, businesses, governments and research partner organizations, they will conduct randomized controlled trials of interventions designed to reduce poverty while conserving natural resources. Possible interventions may include support for community-based forestry businesses, entrepreneurship training, incentive payments for ecosystem services such as carbon sequestration and new community-based monitoring and enforcement tools.
“To be successful and sustainable over the long term, policy interventions need to be supported by the local community,” Iyer said. “Community involvement in the design and implementation of any project is the best way to ensure local support.”

The researchers, who will begin fieldwork this summer, plan to translate their research into recommendations for policymakers. All four scholars have policy experience with organizations including the Food and Agriculture Organization, the World Bank and the government of India.
The project will include an advisory board of key stakeholders, including representatives from community, government and donor organizations such as the World Bank, who will help guide the project, and a multi-disciplinary cohort of graduate students and postdoctoral scholars who are central to the research.
“The collaborative nature of this project is critical for its success,” Miller said. “This diverse team will help ensure that new knowledge gained about the complex relationship between poverty and forests leads to lasting poverty alleviation and environmental protection.”
Originally published by keough.nd.edu on March 03, 2025.
atLatest Research
- Notre Dame Global strengthens ties in Brazil with recent visit and MOU signingLast month, Michael Pippenger, Notre Dame’s vice president & associate provost for internationalization,…
- Through respectful dialogue and encounter, students learn about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and work for peaceA recent intercultural encounter in Rome enabled Notre Dame students to learn about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict by meeting and talking with people who have lived through it. The trip, which built upon a Notre Dame class and a related Notre Dame Forum Series, reflects the University's larger focus on civil dialogue and the empathetic, people-first approach it has taken to teaching and learning about the conflict.
- Breaking the Cycle: How Gender-Based Violence Perpetuates Poverty and What Mexico’s Innovative Program Is Doing About ItResearch examines how Mexico's Gender Violence Alerts Program fights poverty by addressing violence against women, led by Keough School's Abby Córdova.
- ESTEEM Alum David Lyke ‘23 : Innovating in the EV Space with an Entrepreneurial MindsetDavid Lyke ‘23 has always been a problem-solver at heart. Growing up in a small town he started his first company as a freshman in high school as an IT consultant helping students, businesses, and nonprofits find their IT needs. He quickly learned the value of resourcefulness and innovation—two traits…
- Notre Dame Dublin supports four Nanovic Sustainability Research Fellows…
- Major investments announced to accelerate research at the intersection of bioengineering and life sciencesNotre Dame’s Bioengineering & Life Sciences Initiative has announced significant investments aimed at enhancing and growing biomedical research at the University. These include funding of four new cross-disciplinary faculty research teams and a milestone instrument…