1st Edition
The Equitable Forest Diversity, Community, and Resource Management
Edited By Carol J. Pierce Colfer
Copyright 2005
352 Pages
by
Routledge
352 Pages
by
Routledge
352 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
While there continues to be refinement in defining and assessing sustainable management, there remains the urgent need for policies that create the conditions that support sustainability and can halt or slow destructive practices already underway. Carol Colfer and her contributors maintain that standardized solutions to forest problems from afar have failed to address both human and environmental... Read more
Foreword by Angela Cropper
About the Contributors
Acknowledgments
INTRODUCTION
The Struggle for Equity in Forest Management
Carol J. Pierce Colfer
PART I. ASIA
1. Negotiating More Than Boundaries in Indonesia
Njau Anau, Ramses Iwan, Miriam van Heist, Godwin Limberg,
Made Sudana, and Eva Wollenberg
2. Dealing with Overlapping Access Rights in Indonesia
Stepi Hakim
3. Participation and Decisionmaking in Nepal
Sushma Dangol
4. Scientists in Social Encounters: The Case for an Engaged Practice of Science
Mariteuw Chim re Diaw and Trikurnianti Kusumanto
PART II. AFRICA
5. From Diversity to Exclusion for Forest Minorities in Cameroon
Phil Ren Oyono
6. Women in Campo-Ma an National Park: Uncertainties and
Adaptations in Cameroon
Anne Marie Tiani, George Akwah, and Joachim Ngui bouri
7. Women, Decisionmaking, and Resource Management in Zimbabwe
Nontokozo Nemarundwe
8. Becoming Men in Our Dresses! Women‘s Involvement in a Joint Forestry Management Project in Zimbabwe
Bevlyne Sithole
9. Learning Amongst Ourselves: Adaptive Forest Management through Social Learning in Zimbabwe
Tendayi Mutimukuru, Richard Nyirenda, and Frank Matose
PART III. SOUTH AMERICA
10. Intrahousehold Differences in Natural Resource Management in Peru and Brazil
Constance Campbell, Avecita Chicch n, Marianne Schmink, and Richard Piland
11. Improving Collaboration between Outsiders and Communities in the Amazon
Benno Pokorny, Guilhermina Cayres, and Westphalen Nu es
12. Diversity in Living Gender: Two Cases from the Brazilian Amazon
Noemi Miyasaki Porro and Samantha Stone
13. Gender, Participation, and the Strengthening of Indigenous Forest Management in Bolivia
Peter Cronkleton
14. Women‘s Place Is Not in the Forest: Gender Issues in a Timber Management Project in Bolivia
Omaira Bola os and Marianne Schmink
CONCLUSION
Implications of Adaptive Collaborative Management for More
Equitable Forest Management
Carol J. Pierce Colfer
References
Index
Biography
Carol J. Pierce Colfer is a team leader of the CIFOR program Local People, Devolution, and Adaptive Collaborative Management of Forests and the coeditor of People Managing Forests: The Links Between Human Well-Being and Sustainability and Which Way Forward?: People, Forests, and Policymaking in Indonesia.
'Offers an in-depth presentation of adaptive collaborative management and details its analytical and methodological tools, with convincing examples from many countries. . . .A valuable source of information about the ways in which participatory research and action can best contribute to the conservation of forests.' Natural Resources Forum






