2014
DOI: 10.5751/es-06839-190330
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Lessons for REDD+ from Cameroon's past forestry law reform: a political economy analysis

Abstract: ABSTRACT. Reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation and enhancing forest carbon stocks (REDD+) is gaining traction in Cameroon. However, given the deep-rooted trans-sectoral drivers of forest loss, enforcing REDD+ policies will require major policy change and reform both within and beyond the forestry sector. In this paper, we view the REDD+ policy arena in Cameroon within a political economy framework and conduct policy network analysis to explore the factors that will enable or hinder effo… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…Apart from Vietnam, where the dominance of cooperation reflects more the context of an authoritarian political regime than genuine agreement, dominance of cooperation has not yet resulted in rapid and substantial progress. In Cameroon, interest in REDD+ and related reforms in and beyond the forestry sector seems to be very low, despite the country's early participation in multilateral REDD+ initiatives (Kengoum 2011, Dkamela et al 2014. Thus, in this case, lack of challenge and conflict seems to indicate that the national government is not fully engaged.…”
Section: Bargaining For Changementioning
confidence: 95%
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“…Apart from Vietnam, where the dominance of cooperation reflects more the context of an authoritarian political regime than genuine agreement, dominance of cooperation has not yet resulted in rapid and substantial progress. In Cameroon, interest in REDD+ and related reforms in and beyond the forestry sector seems to be very low, despite the country's early participation in multilateral REDD+ initiatives (Kengoum 2011, Dkamela et al 2014. Thus, in this case, lack of challenge and conflict seems to indicate that the national government is not fully engaged.…”
Section: Bargaining For Changementioning
confidence: 95%
“…However, fragmentation of power provides opportunities to reform policies in support of REDD+ objectives only if it signals an inclusive and open policy process, as opposed to a fully fragmented arena that lacks leadership and interest in larger changes in the forestry sector, as seems to be the case in Cameroon (Dkamela et al 2014).…”
Section: Concentration Of Power For a Reformist Redd+ Agendamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As an example, the degree of concentration of power in particular actors can either reflect the autonomy of the nation state from the interests driving deforestation and forest degradation, the extent of national versus international ownership over reform processes, or the level of inclusiveness of policy processes. The case studies from Cameroon (Dkamela et al 2014), Vietnam (Pham et al 2014), Nepal (Bushley 2014), Brazil (Gebara et al 2014), and the comparative paper all investigate issues related to distribution of power. http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss4/art29/ In Cameroon, the international actors are central in controlling and facilitating information flows across organisations, whereas state actors are less involved and domestic civil society organizations are peripheral.…”
Section: Power and Influence: Driving Change?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As an example, high levels of centrality of an actor, i.e., in-degree, which indicates the total number of ties of an actor, or betweeness, which measures how often an actor appears on shortest paths between other actors in the network, or high brokerage scores, referring to actors that act as mediators between two other actors in a network, characterize actors that http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss4/art29/ are able to exert influence over others in the network, control resource flows between other actors, and might be better situated to, e.g., access information or other resources (Gould and Fernandez 1989, Degenne and Forsé 1999, Scott 2000, Burt 2004). These measures were applied in most of the papers in this special feature (Babon et al 2014, Bushley 2014, Dkamela et al 2014, Gebara et al 2014, Moeliono et al 2014, Rantala and Di Gregorio 2014. Actor level measures are also used to investigate associations and causal relationships between relational and other variables.…”
Section: Network Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%