2019
DOI: 10.3390/f10010045
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Forest Concessions and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals: Potentials, Challenges and Ways Forward

Abstract: The Agenda 2030 and its Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) have directed increased political attention to forests and their sustainable management globally. Forest concessions are a predominant instrument for the sustainable management of public production natural forests in the tropics, but the relationship between the SDGs and forest concessions is poorly explored. Knowledge of this relationship could facilitate aligning tropical forest concession regimes with the SDGs. This research was conducted by means… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…While forests received little attention in the millennium development goals, however, these are explicitly stated in SDG 15 (Life on Land) of agenda 2030, and SDG 15 is directly and indirectly related to the other 16 SDGs (Baumgartner, 2019; Bukoski, Drazen, Johnson, & Swamy, 2018; RECOFTC, 2016; Swamy, Drazen, Johnson, & Bukoski, 2018; World Wildlife Fund, 2018). Forests play an important role in reducing poverty, ensuring food security; human well‐being, water conservation, gender empowerment, rural energy source, sustainable economic growth, combating climate change, and promoting sustainable resource use and development (Bukoski et al, 2018; de Jong, Pokorny, Katila, Galloway, & Pacheco, 2018; Fern, 2016; Gratzer & Keeton, 2017; Tegegne, Cramm, Van Brusselen, & Linhares‐Juvenal, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While forests received little attention in the millennium development goals, however, these are explicitly stated in SDG 15 (Life on Land) of agenda 2030, and SDG 15 is directly and indirectly related to the other 16 SDGs (Baumgartner, 2019; Bukoski, Drazen, Johnson, & Swamy, 2018; RECOFTC, 2016; Swamy, Drazen, Johnson, & Bukoski, 2018; World Wildlife Fund, 2018). Forests play an important role in reducing poverty, ensuring food security; human well‐being, water conservation, gender empowerment, rural energy source, sustainable economic growth, combating climate change, and promoting sustainable resource use and development (Bukoski et al, 2018; de Jong, Pokorny, Katila, Galloway, & Pacheco, 2018; Fern, 2016; Gratzer & Keeton, 2017; Tegegne, Cramm, Van Brusselen, & Linhares‐Juvenal, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Partnerships between public and private FMOs remain a relevant mechanism of forest management as 76% of global forestland remains state-owned (Whiteman et al 2015). According to the type of private FMO partner, three forms of public-private partnerships can be distinguished: industrial, community, or household partnerships (Tegegne et al 2018). These can be well-illustrated using the Pestoff framework (Figure 2).…”
Section: Public-private Partnershipsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Forests provide multiple ecosystem services that are decisive for human health and well-being, and provide a principal renewable resource. They are, therefore, of major importance for reaching the SDGs [65][66][67]. However, forests are only explicitly mentioned in two SDGs: 15, "Life on land", which targets sustainable forest management; and 6, "Clean water and sanitation", which requests protection and restoration of forests in one of its targets.…”
Section: Distribution Of Forest-related and Other Bioeconomy Indicatorsmentioning
confidence: 99%