Literature DB >> 23337927

Challenges for community-based forest management in the KoloAla site Manompana.

Zora Lea Urech1, Jean-Pierre Sorg, Hans Rudolph Felber.   

Abstract

Following the IUCN 5th World Congress on Protected Areas in 2003, the then-President of Madagascar decided to increase the area of Madagascar's protected areas from 1.7 to 6 million ha. To combine the aims of protection and timber production, a new concept was developed through the establishment of community-based forest management (CBFM) sites, called KoloAla. However, experience shows that similar management transfers to communities in Madagascar have only been successful in a very few cases. We aimed to explore the success to be expected of this new approach in the particular case of the Manompana corridor at Madagascar's eastern coast. In a first step, the readiness of the corridor's resource users for CBFM has been analysed according to the seven resource users' attributes developed by Ostrom that predict an effective self-organized resource management. In a second step, we explored how KoloAla addresses known challenges of Madagascar's CBFM. Analyses lead in a rather sober conclusion. Although KoloAla attempts to address the goals of poverty alleviation, biodiversity conservation and timber production under a single umbrella, it does so in a rather non-innovative way. Challenges with regard to the state's environmental governance, agricultural inefficiency and thus deforestation remain unsolved.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23337927     DOI: 10.1007/s00267-012-0011-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Manage        ISSN: 0364-152X            Impact factor:   3.266


  7 in total

1.  Defining and explaining tropical deforestation: shifting cultivation and population growth in colonial Madagascar (1896-1940).

Authors:  L Jarosz
Journal:  Econ Geogr       Date:  1993-10

2.  Reforms from the ground up: a review of community-based forest management in tropical developing countries.

Authors:  Lise Tole
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2010-04-30       Impact factor: 3.266

Review 3.  Biodiversity conservation and the eradication of poverty.

Authors:  William M Adams; Ros Aveling; Dan Brockington; Barney Dickson; Jo Elliott; Jon Hutton; Dilys Roe; Bhaskar Vira; William Wolmer
Journal:  Science       Date:  2004-11-12       Impact factor: 47.728

4.  Social and ecological synergy: local rulemaking, forest livelihoods, and biodiversity conservation.

Authors:  Lauren Persha; Arun Agrawal; Ashwini Chhatre
Journal:  Science       Date:  2011-03-25       Impact factor: 47.728

5.  The tragedy of the commons. The population problem has no technical solution; it requires a fundamental extension in morality.

Authors:  G Hardin
Journal:  Science       Date:  1968-12-13       Impact factor: 47.728

6.  A chronology for late prehistoric Madagascar.

Authors:  David A Burney; Lida Pigott Burney; Laurie R Godfrey; William L Jungers; Steven M Goodman; Henry T Wright; A J Timothy Jull
Journal:  J Hum Evol       Date:  2004 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 3.895

7.  Understanding and integrating local perceptions of trees and forests into incentives for sustainable landscape management.

Authors:  Jean-Laurent Pfund; John Daniel Watts; Manuel Boissière; Amandine Boucard; Renee Marie Bullock; Andree Ekadinata; Sonya Dewi; Laurène Feintrenie; Patrice Levang; Salla Rantala; Douglas Sheil; Terry Sunderland; Terence Clarence Heethom Sunderland; Zora Lea Urech
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2011-06-05       Impact factor: 3.266

  7 in total
  1 in total

1.  Analysis of internal processes of conflict behavior among Iranian rangeland exploiters: Application of environmental psychology.

Authors:  Latif Haji; Dariush Hayati
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-08-31
  1 in total

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