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Involving communities in forest governance boosts biodiversity, local income

Involving local communities in the governance of forest resources boosts economic returns and biodiversity relative to areas where locals have little participation, report researchers writing in Science. The findings have implications for efforts to protect and sustainably manage forests under the reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD) mechanism.



Analyzing data from 84 villages across Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, India, Nepal and Bhutan, Lauren Persha of the University of Michigan and colleagues found that livelihoods of forest-dependent communities and forest biodiversity were higher when local populations are directly participate in rule-making aspects of forest governance.


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“There has been a lot of rhetoric around achieving ‘win-win’ outcomes across social and ecological dimensions of forests, while some think win-wins are impossible and trade-offs are inevitable,” said Persha, a postdoctoral research fellow with the International Forestry Resources and Institutions (IFRI) Research Program, in a statement. “But, there has been very little work to date which uses systematic and sufficiently robust data to try to move beyond this ‘either/or’ rhetoric in order to better understand relationships between social and ecological outcomes from forests, or to identify important institutional, socio-economic, policy, or related factors that are associated which jointly positive outcomes.”



“Rulemaking participation rights for local forest users was a key factor in getting a win-win situation in our research,” added co-author Arun Agrawal, also with the University of Michigan and IFRI. “Similarly, we found a greater likelihood of a forest being below average for both subsistence livelihoods and biodiversity when local forest users do not have this right.”



The findings lend support to the argument that local communities should have a say in whether they participate in REDD, a climate change mitigation strategy that proposes paying tropical countries for protecting and sustainably managing forests. REDD advocates say the mechanism could help safeguard biodiversity and generate income for local communities, but REDD has faced stiff opposition from local populations who want to determine on their own how they will manage forest resources they traditionally use.



Lauren Persha, Arun Agrawal, Ashwini Chhatre. Social and Ecological Synergy: Local Rulemaking, Forest Livelihoods, and Biodiversity Conservation. 25 MARCH 2011 VOL 331 SCIENCE







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