Part I. Introduction
1. Tenure Change in the Global South
2. Forest Tenure Reform: An Orphan with Only Uncles
Part II. The Transfer of Tenure Rights
3. The Devolution of Management Rights and the Comanagement of Community Forests
4. From Discourse to Policy: The Practical Interface of Statutory and Customary Land and Forest Rights
Part III. Governance Institutions: Authority Relations and Social Movements
5. Authority Relations under New Forest Tenure Arrangements
6. Community Networks, Collective Action and Forest Management Benefits
Part IV. Regulations and Markets for Forest Products
7. Regulations as Barriers to Community Benefits in Tenure Reform
8. Communities and Forest Markets: Assessing the Benefits from Diverse Forms of Engagement
Part V. Outcomes and Conclusions
9. Outcomes of Reform for Livelihoods, Forest Condition and Equity
10. Conclusions and Reflections for the Future of Forest Tenure Reform
References
Contributors
Abbreviations
Index
Anne M Larson is Senior Research Associate with the Center for International Forestry Research and is based in Nicaragua. Her research has focused on conservation and development, decentralization, indigenous rights and forest governance. She holds a PhD in Wildland Resource Science from the University of California, Berkeley and a B.S. in Environmental Science from Stanford University. Deborah Barry is a Senior Research Associate at the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) and the Director of Country Programs for the Rights and Resources Initiative, based in Washington, DC. An economic and cultural geographer, her recent areas of work have been on community forestry in Mexico and Central America, forest tenure and governance and payment for environmental services with a concern for equity. Ganga Ram Dahal, Nepalese citizen, is a Research Consultant at the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR). He obtained his PhD in Forest Policy and Governance from the University of Reading in the United Kingdom. His main areas of work include decentralisation, forest tenure, community forestry and institutions. Carol J. Pierce Colfer is an Anthropologist and Principal Scientist at the Center for International Forestry Research. In recent years her work has focused on adaptive collaborative management of forests, devolution and decentralization in forests, and landscape level forest governance. She holds a PhD in Cultural Anthropology from University of Washington in Seattle, 1974; and MPH (Master of Public Health) in International Health from the University of Hawaii, Honolulu, 1979.
'An important, ambitious and timely contribution to scholarship on
local forest management. Forests for People presents a rich
analysis of the opportunities and obstacles that communities face
when their rights to manage forests are formally recognized. Most
striking is the effort at synthesis across a number of key themes,
drawing on the experience of scholars from around the globe who
participated in the cases study research. I highly recommend it to
any policymaker, practitioner or researcher interested in
communities and forests.'
Elinor Ostrom, Indiana University, joint winner of the Nobel Prize
in Economic Sciences, 2009 'This volume does a superb job of
synthesizing the lessons learned. Rather than presenting a series
of country case studies as is often the case in comparative volumes
spanning three continents, the chapters are organized according to
cross-cutting themes. Each chapter draws upon the findings for a
range of countries, sometimes in all three regions, and includes an
extensive literature review.'
Carmen Diana Deere, Professor of Food and Resource Economics and
Latin American Studies, University of Florida, USA 'Tenure and
access will be amongst the biggest challenges if the large
investments soon to be made in forests for climate change
mitigation and adaptation are to be effective and equitable. This
new book provides a unique synthesis of current thinking on forest
tenure issues and will be essential reading for those involved in
forest policy reforms.'
Jeffrey Sayer, IUCN (International Union for Conservation of
Nature) 'This is an outstanding contribution to research and action
on community forestry. In a period when a new global forest regime
seems upon us, it presents a cogent, evidence-backed argument in
favor of tenure and rights to forest-dependent communities.'
Arun Agrawal, University of Michigan, USA Forests for People
provides 'considerable insight into the diversity of customary
rights, the many ways in which governments manipulate title to land
and resources, the politics of empowerment, etc.'
David Walton, Bulletin of the British Ecological Society ''Forests
for People' is a choice and solidly recommended pick for anyone
intrigued by the forest debate.'
Wisconsin Bookwatch, Midwestern Book Review, July 2010. 'essential
reading for those invovled in forest policy reform, who wish to
learn from recent experiences around the world.'
New Agriculturist, May 2010. 'Well researched and written
book...the book will form key reference material for anyone working
with policy and user-groups in forests or woodlands anywhere in the
southern hemisphere.'
Isla Grundy, Southern Forests, May 2010. 'Provides a clear synopsis
of recent efforts to change forest tenure...Important related
issues are well integrated'
B.D.Orr, Choice Magazine, October 2010. 'Forests for people is a
scholarly and succinct analysis of forest tenure reform based on
evidence from around the world. As such it is an important resource
for those working in forest policy reform, both planners and
practitioners.'
Unasylva
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