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1.
A study was conducted to assess the role and effectiveness of community organisers in supporting the development of people’s
organisations in achieving community-based forest management objectives in Leyte Province Philippines. Community organisers
were found to be effective in forming people’s organisations (POs), motivating people to participate in voluntary activities
organised by POs and encouraging cohesiveness among PO members. Community organisers manage to raise the level of environmental
awareness and knowledge of members of people’s organisations, develop leadership interest and skills, create various livelihood
opportunities and provide direction and facilitate the establishment of large tree plantations. However, the short duration
of community organisers’ contracts (typically two years) is insufficient to establish mature and cohesive POs prepared to
assume management on their own, including the management of tree plantations. Further, lack of training and funding support,
low wages, delayed payment of salaries and limited time to work with people’s organisations, as well as the pressure to produce
tangible outputs such the establishment of large tree plantations, prevents them from placing greater emphasis on the development
and empowerment of the people. 相似文献
2.
A survey of forestry practices and attitudes was undertaken in four communities in Leyte, the Philippines, to improve understanding
of the social and economic factors affecting small-scale forestry development. The survey had three main data collection activities
— initial focus group discussions (FGDs), household interviews, and reporting and validation FGDs. A team of enumerators was
selected for household interviews which consisted of both males and females, to avoid potential problems of unwillingness
of people to talk with those of the opposite gender. The interviewers were also required to be able to speak local dialects
(Cebuano and Waray Waray), the survey questionnaires being administered in these dialects. Various methods were used to gain
the support and assistance of local government units and barangay captains. Some difficulty was experienced by the survey
team in the first community due to barangay elections at the time of the survey, and the requirement by the University of
Queensland Ethics Committee that respondents sign a consent form. This requirement was found to be not culturally appropriate
for the Leyte smallholder communities. Offering goods at the end of the interview was found to be of limited value for encouraging
participation in the survey. Provision of food and drinks were found to encourage FGD participants to express their views,
but too much alcohol had a negative effect. The importance of providing comprehensive feedback to respondents and involving
them and other stakeholders in development of policy recommendations was apparent. These survey experiences provide valuable
insights which are not generally available in textbooks on sample surveys, and provide lessons for planning and conducting
smallholder community survey into natural resource management issues. 相似文献
3.
Ian Jeffreys 《Small-Scale Forestry》2004,3(1):99-117
Small-scale farm forestry has the potential to offer many benefits both to landholders and the wider community. As with all
changes in land-use practices, there are associated benefits and costs and these are not uniformly distributed. They have
varying impacts on the different values, aspirations, goals and objectives that exist within the community. Furthermore, the
community does not consider these values, aspirations, goals and objectives of equal importance. The degree of concern can
vary from minor to high and overriding all other considerations. When evaluating farm forestry options it is necessary to
address all of these concerns. This paper examines the combined use compensatory and non-compensatory multi-criteria analyses
to evaluate forestry options, in a case study for the Darling Downs region of Queensland, Australia. These aggregation techniques
are found to be highly complementary and together provide a comprehensive analysis. The compensatory technique provides a
sound measure of overall performance of a forestry system, whereas the non-compensatory technique alerts decision-makers to
presence of particularly poor performance with respect to individual criteria. The compensatory technique used is simple and
understandable even for those with non-mathematical backgrounds. This analysis can identify and aid communication of the relative
benefits and costs, and trade-offs, between economic, environmental and social considerations. 相似文献
4.
Over the last decade, forestry has become increasingly more involved with and integrated into the more general rural development (RD) process in the Third World. In doing so, forestry joins an activity that has itself been developing and maturing for some three decades and more, in the course of which a good deal of useful experience has been accumulated. This paper attempts to distill from that experience lessons that will be helpful in forestry development planning. This focus is first on the constraints that have affected RD, sometimes quite severely, in terms of resources, organization, policy, and the socio-political sphere. Second, the paper evaluates the experience with rural institutions as vehicles for promoting and nurturing RD, with particular emphasis on local organizations and popular participation in them. The third focus is on applying some of these lessons to the forestry sector, using as examples the issues of employment creation, regional growth, women's participation and distributional equity of development benefits. 相似文献
5.
Stephan Pauleit 《中国林业科技(英文版)》2008,(1)
Hangzhou is a typical city on the establishment of urban forest in China, so it was identified as a case study site in Urban Forestry Policy Project Co-funded by EC. The name of the project is "Developing Policy Formulation and Implementation Tools for Providing Support for Ecological Forest Management in China’s Urban and Peri-Urban Areas". Experts from the project team have conducted a field survey on urban forestry policy in Hangzhou for one week. Through the field survey and the workshop, the experts un... 相似文献
6.
Mohammad Samaun Safa 《Small-Scale Forestry》2006,5(2):207-229
The encroachment rate in forests in Bangladesh is high and increasing — accelerated by rural poverty and the demand for dwelling
space and forest products — causing environmental degradation as well as loss of forest cover and productivity. The forests
are managed by the Forest Department, although a substantial area of marginal land belongs to other semi-public agencies including
Roads and Highways and the Water Development Board. This marginal land has been left unused or underutilized. In contrast,
nongovernmental organizations have an appropriate accessibility and technology disseminating ability to utilize this land
in reducing poverty and enhancing rural livelihood, and have been highly active and successful in rehabilitating encroached
forests. NGOs have added a new dimension to forest management, which has ensured community participation and protection of
the forests, both planted and natural. This study evaluates the social forestry activities of four large NGOs, namely BRAC,
Proshika, Caritas and CARE-Bangladesh, as well as national social forestry activities. By adopting a common partnership between
public and private authority, property right conflicts have been resolved and rural livelihoods enhanced, and scope has been
created for utilizing marginal land. The NGO partnership has been effective in reducing poverty and improving livelihoods.
As an outcome of this common partnership, 33,472 km of roadside planting and 53,430 ha of reforestation activities have been
carried out during the last two decades. 相似文献
7.
In 1985, the government of Indonesia declared an export ban on logs in order to promote the wood processing industry within
the country. Furthermore, this policy was followed by a regulation that the concessionaires have to build their own industry,
causing a great increase in wood industry. In the early period after the log export ban, the government found it to be successful
and there were no significant problems. Unfortunately, after one decade, Indonesia’s forestry sector faced some serious problems,i.e. problems in raw material supply which was lower than the log demand level in the industry, deforestation issues, and ecological
imbalance. The main objectives of this study are to identify the effects of the log export ban and to introduce some alternate
measures. 相似文献
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