2012
DOI: 10.4103/0972-4923.97481
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Co-management in community forestry: How the partial devolution of management rights creates challenges for forest communities

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Cited by 85 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…In co-management schemes, governments need to provide secure property rights that define who has rights and responsibilities to manage, and to establish guidelines or frameworks that encourage sustainable management practices (Cronkleton et al 2012a). An important step in securing resource rights is apparent in the multiple types of property institutions created to grant to indigenous peoples and extractivist populations rights over Brazil nut-rich forests.…”
Section: The Governance System Policy Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In co-management schemes, governments need to provide secure property rights that define who has rights and responsibilities to manage, and to establish guidelines or frameworks that encourage sustainable management practices (Cronkleton et al 2012a). An important step in securing resource rights is apparent in the multiple types of property institutions created to grant to indigenous peoples and extractivist populations rights over Brazil nut-rich forests.…”
Section: The Governance System Policy Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Relative levels of power between government and private actors also vary from predominantly private to predominantly government run [3,12]. In developing countries, co-management is predominantly government driven and pre-designed, and the devolution of authority and resource rights to users is often partial [1,13]. Traditional definitions of co-management have been relatively static and structuralist, -emphasizing legal aspects and formal structures/institutions,‖ and have failed to capture -the complexity, variation and dynamic nature of contemporary systems of governance‖ [3].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Forestry development policies typically are accompanied by strict regulations that attempt to frame, condition and standardize community-level decisions (Larson and Pulhin 2012;Cronkleton et al 2012), thus reshaping local institutions, organizations and management practices that must be adapted in response; For example, communal properties can be institutionally complex with internal nested subdivisions for sub-groups or individuals that allocate customary control over forest resources (Ankersen and Barnes 2004). Although rights to forests in such cases may be communal, use and management decisions are more often handled at the household scale (e.g.…”
Section: Definitions Of 'Community Forestry'mentioning
confidence: 99%