Technical experts assessed forest certification, including impacts on forest management and timber markets, effects for forest workers and communities affected by certified forest management, quality of certification audits, and governance and authority of certification schemes.
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Impact of forest certification on sustainable forest management
1. 24th IUFRO World Congress: Sustaining Forests, Sustaining People: The Role
Understanding Tenure Security in the
Implementation of Reforms: Clarifying
Concepts and Methods
6 October, 2014
of Research, October 5-11, 2014
Mani Ram Banjade
2. Outline
Motivation
Research objectives
What is forest tenure?
Tenure security
Domains of tenure security
Research approach and methods
3. Why to study forest tenure?
Changing context
of tenure reform
Historical
analysis of
emergence and
development of
tenure reform
Fragmented
studies: Focus
either on policy
or outcomes
A comprehensive
research on
policies and laws,
implementation
process and
outcomes
Varied outcomes
of forest tenure
reform
implementation
Outcomes on
livelihoods,
forest resource
and tenure
security
Challenges
4. Motivation: Paper vs on the ground
On paper: Between 2002-2013 considerable increase (128.5
Mha) in forest area under ownership of or designated for
local communities (RRI, 2014)
On the ground: Close
to 2 decades of reforms
ostensibly aimed at
securing local tenure
Improve livelihoods
Incentives for
sustainable land
management
Uneven, with mixed results:
Not ambitious enough/full rights?
Customary systems unaccounted
for
On-going external threats via
competing uses
Internal differentiation, including
gender
Implementation gaps/bottlenecks
5. Objectives
Establish how forest tenure reforms
emerge, and document experiences and
options for formal approaches to securing
customary rights.
Identify impacts of tenure reform on
rights and access of women, poor men and
ethnic minorities to forests and trees.
Identify factors that constrain reform
implementation.
Disseminate lessons learned and
knowledge generated at sub-national,
national, regional and international levels.
6. Purpose
Getting your feedback on concepts of tenure
security to help us organize the methods for
the study across 3 countries in 3 world regions
7. What is forest tenure?
‘the social relations and institutions governing access to and
use of land and forest resources’ (Larson et al. 2012).
Forest tenure systems
• State forest tenure systems vs community forest tenure
system (Safitri, 2010)
• Formal vs informal systems
Whose rights: Rights assigned to individual, group,
communal, customary or state
De jure vs de facto rights
8. Bundle of rights
Schlager and Ostrom (1992): access,
manage, exclude and alienate
FAO, 2011: rights to use, manage, control,
market products, inherit, sell, transfer,
dispose of, lease or mortgage.
RRI 2012: access, withdrawal,
management, exclusion, alienation,
duration and extinguishability of Rights
Management rights: Rule-making,
compliance monitoring and disputes
adjudication (Agrawal and Ostrom 2008)
9. Tenure Security
Mwangi and Meinzen-Dick (2009: 310): ‘the ability of an
individual [or group] to appropriate resources on a continuous
basis, free from imposition, dispute or approbation from outside
sources…’ It is the certainty of scope of rights and duration.
Tenure security involves what rights, for whom, for how long,
with what certainty
Analysis differs based on domains of tenure security: normative
or statutory provisions (legal statements), actual practices
(enforcement of formal rights and social norms), how actors
perceive them, and consideration beyond lived experience
10. Domains of tenure security
Normative
(De jure)
Normative
(De jure)
Actual
(De facto)
Actual
(De facto)
Perception of
tenure security
Perception of
tenure security
Risks beyond
perception
Risks beyond
perception
11. Normative tenure security
Robustness of
property rights
Robustness of
property rights
LLeeggaaliltityy
CClalarritityy
Bundle of
rights
Bundle of
rights
• Legal basis
• Granting authority
• Right holders
• Scope: rights and
obligations
• Boundaries
• Ways of exclusion
Duration of
Duration of
rights
rights
Assurance of
Assurance of
rights
rights
Legal protection
against expropriation
Legal protection
against expropriation
Conflict resolution
Conflict resolution
mechanism
mechanism
Participation in
decision-making
Participation in
decision-making
12. Actual tenure security
Interaction of actors, rules
and power
Compliance
Conflicts and conflict
resolution
Technocratic/managerial
dimensions: motivations,
incentives, capacities,
budgets/staffing
13. Perception of tenure security
Perception of the certainty of the rights irrespective
of the breath or the duration of rights offered.
14. Threats to tenure security
Extractive activities
Large-scale investments: land
grabs
Demographic pressures:
population growth, migration
Elite capture
Resource-based conflicts
15. Tenure security
Interaction of
rules, norms,
Interaction of
rules, norms,
actors
actors
Enforcement
of rights
Enforcement
of rights
Perception of
certainty of
Perception of
certainty of
rights
rights
Perception of
Perception of
Threats beyond
perception
threats Threats beyond
threats
perception
16. Research approach
Diagnosis research and analysis: Cross-country
comparison, extensive surveys, policy and legal
analysis, FGD, key informants interviews, documents
review
Multi-actor engagement: joint problem solving,
future scenarios, experience sharing
Knowledge sharing: workshops, needs assessments,
tools (eg conflict resolution; gender integration);
tenure literacy
17. Your inputs
How do we study this?
What is the best way to cover all these
variables?
Do we have to cover them all?
Are we missing anything?