Overview of Sessions: Stream 1 Inclusive value chains, finance and investmentsCIFOR-ICRAF
This document provides an overview of the conference streams and sessions for "Inclusive Value Chains, Finance and Investments". Stream 1 focuses on inclusive business models, value chains, and reducing barriers to inclusive landscape finance. Session 1 will explore innovations in business models and value chains for sustainable timber and agricultural supply. Session 2 will examine innovations in public policy, finance, and investments that can reduce barriers and scale up finance for sustainable landscapes. The sessions will include keynote presentations and panels discussing case studies and lessons learned.
Improving smallholder inclusiveness in palm oil productionCIFOR-ICRAF
A global review of improving smallholder inclusiveness in palm oil production, presented by Rosalien Jezeer (Tropenbos International) at FTA 2020 Science Conference.
Author(s): Maja Slingerland (WUR), Carina van der Laan, Nick Pasiecznik (Tropenbos International)
FMNR IN SOUTHERN AFRICA: FACTORS MOTIVATING FARMERS WITH ACTIONS AND STRATEG...FMNR Hub
This document discusses farmer managed natural regeneration (FMNR) in Southern Africa. It provides examples of FMNR from Malawi, highlighting the benefits of Faidherbia albida trees for increasing crop yields. Studies show maize yields increased by 50-200% under Faidherbia canopies. The document also examines natural regeneration of other tree species on smallholder farms in Malawi. Key factors motivating farmers to adopt FMNR are discussed. To scale up FMNR, the document recommends increasing awareness, leveraging support from various organizations, and combining FMNR with conservation agriculture practices.
This document discusses community-based forest management in Niger and provides several key points:
1) Community-based forest management in Niger involves farmers regenerating trees on their own land, leading to widespread re-greening across Niger as the practice spread from farmer to farmer.
2) As trees regenerated and crop yields increased, over 5 million hectares of land saw renewed tree growth by 2006, improving food security and reducing desertification.
3) The document reviews lessons learned from community forest management programs in Mali, Guatemala, India, and the United States, noting the importance of inclusion of migrant users, long-term planning, and business skills.
Community forestry. Where and why has devolution of forest rights contributed...IFPRI-PIM
Presentation for the webinar organized by the CGIAR Research Program on Policies, Institutions, and Markets (www.pim.cgiar.org) on August 29, 2017. Steven Lawry, Director of Equity, Gender and Tenure research program at Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) summarized findings of selected meta-analyses, presented case studies from Nepal, Guatemala, and Mexico, and previewed emerging research looking at the investment effects of community forestry models that feature strong elements of forest rights devolution.
Leasehold forestry in Nepal over two decades of implementationPROCASUR Corporation
Learning Route on women’s empowerment, business development and sustainable natural resource management.
Scaling-up programmes for the rural poor in Nepal. 6 to 13 December, 2014. IFAD & PROCASUR.
More contents at: http://asia.procasur.org/portfolio_item/nepal-learning-route/
Public private partnership in forestry managementCIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation was delivered during the Course on Governance of Landscapes, Forests and People at the CIFOR Campus in Bogor, Indonesia.
It discusses: the reason public-private partnerships became an option; whether or not these partnerships are effective, trade-offs and challenges to consider; and how to ensure the effectiveness public-private partnerships at the landscape level.
Overview of Sessions: Stream 1 Inclusive value chains, finance and investmentsCIFOR-ICRAF
This document provides an overview of the conference streams and sessions for "Inclusive Value Chains, Finance and Investments". Stream 1 focuses on inclusive business models, value chains, and reducing barriers to inclusive landscape finance. Session 1 will explore innovations in business models and value chains for sustainable timber and agricultural supply. Session 2 will examine innovations in public policy, finance, and investments that can reduce barriers and scale up finance for sustainable landscapes. The sessions will include keynote presentations and panels discussing case studies and lessons learned.
Improving smallholder inclusiveness in palm oil productionCIFOR-ICRAF
A global review of improving smallholder inclusiveness in palm oil production, presented by Rosalien Jezeer (Tropenbos International) at FTA 2020 Science Conference.
Author(s): Maja Slingerland (WUR), Carina van der Laan, Nick Pasiecznik (Tropenbos International)
FMNR IN SOUTHERN AFRICA: FACTORS MOTIVATING FARMERS WITH ACTIONS AND STRATEG...FMNR Hub
This document discusses farmer managed natural regeneration (FMNR) in Southern Africa. It provides examples of FMNR from Malawi, highlighting the benefits of Faidherbia albida trees for increasing crop yields. Studies show maize yields increased by 50-200% under Faidherbia canopies. The document also examines natural regeneration of other tree species on smallholder farms in Malawi. Key factors motivating farmers to adopt FMNR are discussed. To scale up FMNR, the document recommends increasing awareness, leveraging support from various organizations, and combining FMNR with conservation agriculture practices.
This document discusses community-based forest management in Niger and provides several key points:
1) Community-based forest management in Niger involves farmers regenerating trees on their own land, leading to widespread re-greening across Niger as the practice spread from farmer to farmer.
2) As trees regenerated and crop yields increased, over 5 million hectares of land saw renewed tree growth by 2006, improving food security and reducing desertification.
3) The document reviews lessons learned from community forest management programs in Mali, Guatemala, India, and the United States, noting the importance of inclusion of migrant users, long-term planning, and business skills.
Community forestry. Where and why has devolution of forest rights contributed...IFPRI-PIM
Presentation for the webinar organized by the CGIAR Research Program on Policies, Institutions, and Markets (www.pim.cgiar.org) on August 29, 2017. Steven Lawry, Director of Equity, Gender and Tenure research program at Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) summarized findings of selected meta-analyses, presented case studies from Nepal, Guatemala, and Mexico, and previewed emerging research looking at the investment effects of community forestry models that feature strong elements of forest rights devolution.
Leasehold forestry in Nepal over two decades of implementationPROCASUR Corporation
Learning Route on women’s empowerment, business development and sustainable natural resource management.
Scaling-up programmes for the rural poor in Nepal. 6 to 13 December, 2014. IFAD & PROCASUR.
More contents at: http://asia.procasur.org/portfolio_item/nepal-learning-route/
Public private partnership in forestry managementCIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation was delivered during the Course on Governance of Landscapes, Forests and People at the CIFOR Campus in Bogor, Indonesia.
It discusses: the reason public-private partnerships became an option; whether or not these partnerships are effective, trade-offs and challenges to consider; and how to ensure the effectiveness public-private partnerships at the landscape level.
Key governance issues and the fate of secondary forests as a tool for large-s...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Manuel Guariguata, Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), at the 54th Annual Meeting of the Association of Tropical Biology and Conservation (ATBC) in Merida, Yucatán, Mexico, on July 12, 2017.
#ATBC2017
Growing forest partnerships and the investing in locally controlled initiativeCIFOR-ICRAF
The document discusses the Growing Forest Partnerships & Investing in Locally Controlled Initiative, a World Bank funded effort to increase stakeholder participation in forest policy. It is working in several countries to identify priorities, test projects, and link local and national decision-making. The initiative also facilitates global dialogues on investing in locally controlled forestry. Several alliances of forest rights holders are mentioned that promote community forestry and sustainable management. Locally controlled forestry is defined as decisions made by local forest owners and communities with secure tenure rights and access to markets.
Community forestry and certification: Dealing with interfaces between global ...CIFOR-ICRAF
K. Freerk Wiersum, Shoana S. Humphries and Severine van Bommel
Presentation for the conference on
Taking stock of smallholders and community forestry
Montpellier France
March 24-26, 2010
The 4Fs Initiative aims to address the challenges of agricultural expansion driving deforestation through dialogue. It will create platforms for stakeholders in forests and agriculture to engage in discussion to explore challenges and improve land-use decision making processes. The initiative applies the successful dialogue process model of The Forests Dialogue, which has resolved conflicts in the forest sector over 12 years through trust building and collaboration.
Outcomes of land and forest tenure reform implementation: A global comparativ...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Baruani Mshale, from the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), at the XVI Biennial IASC Conference ‘Practicing the commons: self-governance, cooperation, and institutional change’, in Utrecht, the Netherlands, on July 11, 2017.
Innovation Plan: Economic empowerment of Women in Kirinyaga County, KenyaPROCASUR Corporation
This document outlines a project to economically empower women in Kirinyaga County, Kenya by reducing fruit waste and increasing value addition of fruits. The project aims to increase incomes of rural women, reduce fruit waste during peak seasons, and promote value addition of available fruits like tomatoes, mangoes, bananas and avocados. Key activities include confirming markets, mobilizing community groups, training women on fruit processing and preservation techniques, acquiring processing equipment, and training on equipment usage. The expected results are reduced fruit waste, increased incomes for rural women, enhanced bargaining power over prices, and increased fruit consumption.
Analyzing social differentiation within collective tenure regimes: Forest ten...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Iliana Monterroso, from the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), at the XVI Biennial IASC Conference ‘Practicing the commons: self-governance, cooperation, and institutional change’, in Utrecht, the Netherlands, on July 11, 2017.
The document discusses conflict management and sustainable forest management in the Himalayas. It analyzes three case studies from India and Nepal where conflicts were hindering sustainable forest management. The case studies identified conflicts through participatory assessments and developed customized approaches to facilitate inclusive conflict management between stakeholders. This included vision building, mediation, cost-benefit analyses, and exposure trips. The approaches led to inter-watershed consensus, improved forest cover and microclimate, and community actions on conservation. However, one case study in Nepal did not achieve consensus for long-term forest management due to authoritarian conflict management styles. The studies show conflict management must be integrated into forest governance to achieve sustainable outcomes.
Benefit sharing from a multilevel governance perspectiveCIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation was delivered by Anne M Larson, January 2016, in Brussels.
It examines the opportunity, transaction and implementation costs of REDD+ at national and subnational levels, multilevel governance and rights, and assesses perspectives of equity at different levels.
Session 6.4 are innovation platforms possible institutions for integrated nrm...World Agroforestry (ICRAF)
This document discusses innovation platforms (IPs) as institutions for integrated natural resource management (INRM) at the landscape level. It uses the case study of the Kapchorwa District Landcare Chapter (KADLACC) in Uganda. KADLACC is an IP established through the AGILE concept to address challenges like declining vegetation/soil fertility and conflicts through collective action. It facilitates integrated development planning and farmer learning. Major interventions include strengthening local government involvement in NRM planning and developing market linkages. Key results include increased tree planting, community bylaws for watershed management, and income generation. Outcomes are reduced grazing/landslides, increased production/income, and strengthened community cohesion, gender balancing and youth engagement
Presentation by Phil Franks and Andrea Quesada at the Global Landscapes Forum 2015, in Paris, France alongside COP21. For more information go to: www.landscapes.org.
Presented by Manuel R. Guariguata (CIFOR) at the World Conference on Ecological Restoration (SER 2017) in Foz do Iguassu, Paraná (Brazil), on August 28, 2017.
Session: Symposium – Deciphering the land: Using landscape attributes to estimate the potential for natural regeneration of tropical forests.
Joint forest management (JFM) involves village communities and state forest departments regenerating and conserving forests through contracts specifying shared authority, responsibilities, and benefits. Two early pilot experiments took place in the 1970s in West Bengal and Haryana. JFM projects now operate in Orissa, Himachal Pradesh, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, and Karnataka, providing employment and environmental benefits by increasing forest cover and biodiversity protection through community involvement.
Forest tenure reform implementation: Perspectives from national and sub-natio...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Tuti Herawati Hadis, from the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), at the XVI Biennial IASC Conference ‘Practicing the commons: self-governance, cooperation, and institutional change’, in Utrecht, the Netherlands, on July 11, 2017.
Making Climate-Smart Agriculture Work for the PoorCIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation by Henry Neufeldt from ICRAF talks about climate-smart agriculture, the key areas of science innovation there, some farmer climate coping strategies, the constrains, the benefits and the key messages concerning CSA.
Governance, rights and the role of politics in redd+ equity discoursesCIFOR-ICRAF
Presentation by Grace Wong, Maria Brockhaus, Lasse Loft, Pham Thu Thuy, and Anastasia Yang at the Global Landscapes Forum 2015, in Paris, France alongside COP21. For more information go to: www.landscapes.org.
How Landscape Approaches Support National Programs and GoalsCIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation by Peter Besseau from the International Model Forest Network focuses on the why of landscapes approaches, what a model forest is, its framework and what was learned from working on a landscape scale.
This document discusses traditional natural resource management in Zambia and its decline, as well as solutions and regeneration efforts. [1] Traditional systems involved sustainable practices like mosaic burning, mixed crops, and planned grazing. [2] European invasion disrupted these systems through activities like sport hunting, mono-cropping, and clear-felling. This led to environmental degradation, wildlife declines, and poverty. [3] Solutions discussed include farmland and landscape regeneration through practices like FMNR (farmer-managed natural regeneration) and holistic management, as well as community-based natural resource management. The goal is environmental, economic, and social stability through regenerative practices managed by local communities.
This concept note details parallel session 3 at the ASFN 6th conference at Inle Lake in June 2015. The theme is "Management and Governance of Dynamic Forest and Agriculture Landscapes".
Greater than the sum of its parts? Lessons from a collaborative, multi-actor,...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Nining Liswanti, from the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), at the XVI Biennial IASC Conference ‘Practicing the commons: self-governance, cooperation, and institutional change’, in Utrecht, the Netherlands, on July 14, 2017.
Key governance issues and the fate of secondary forests as a tool for large-s...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Manuel Guariguata, Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), at the 54th Annual Meeting of the Association of Tropical Biology and Conservation (ATBC) in Merida, Yucatán, Mexico, on July 12, 2017.
#ATBC2017
Growing forest partnerships and the investing in locally controlled initiativeCIFOR-ICRAF
The document discusses the Growing Forest Partnerships & Investing in Locally Controlled Initiative, a World Bank funded effort to increase stakeholder participation in forest policy. It is working in several countries to identify priorities, test projects, and link local and national decision-making. The initiative also facilitates global dialogues on investing in locally controlled forestry. Several alliances of forest rights holders are mentioned that promote community forestry and sustainable management. Locally controlled forestry is defined as decisions made by local forest owners and communities with secure tenure rights and access to markets.
Community forestry and certification: Dealing with interfaces between global ...CIFOR-ICRAF
K. Freerk Wiersum, Shoana S. Humphries and Severine van Bommel
Presentation for the conference on
Taking stock of smallholders and community forestry
Montpellier France
March 24-26, 2010
The 4Fs Initiative aims to address the challenges of agricultural expansion driving deforestation through dialogue. It will create platforms for stakeholders in forests and agriculture to engage in discussion to explore challenges and improve land-use decision making processes. The initiative applies the successful dialogue process model of The Forests Dialogue, which has resolved conflicts in the forest sector over 12 years through trust building and collaboration.
Outcomes of land and forest tenure reform implementation: A global comparativ...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Baruani Mshale, from the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), at the XVI Biennial IASC Conference ‘Practicing the commons: self-governance, cooperation, and institutional change’, in Utrecht, the Netherlands, on July 11, 2017.
Innovation Plan: Economic empowerment of Women in Kirinyaga County, KenyaPROCASUR Corporation
This document outlines a project to economically empower women in Kirinyaga County, Kenya by reducing fruit waste and increasing value addition of fruits. The project aims to increase incomes of rural women, reduce fruit waste during peak seasons, and promote value addition of available fruits like tomatoes, mangoes, bananas and avocados. Key activities include confirming markets, mobilizing community groups, training women on fruit processing and preservation techniques, acquiring processing equipment, and training on equipment usage. The expected results are reduced fruit waste, increased incomes for rural women, enhanced bargaining power over prices, and increased fruit consumption.
Analyzing social differentiation within collective tenure regimes: Forest ten...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Iliana Monterroso, from the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), at the XVI Biennial IASC Conference ‘Practicing the commons: self-governance, cooperation, and institutional change’, in Utrecht, the Netherlands, on July 11, 2017.
The document discusses conflict management and sustainable forest management in the Himalayas. It analyzes three case studies from India and Nepal where conflicts were hindering sustainable forest management. The case studies identified conflicts through participatory assessments and developed customized approaches to facilitate inclusive conflict management between stakeholders. This included vision building, mediation, cost-benefit analyses, and exposure trips. The approaches led to inter-watershed consensus, improved forest cover and microclimate, and community actions on conservation. However, one case study in Nepal did not achieve consensus for long-term forest management due to authoritarian conflict management styles. The studies show conflict management must be integrated into forest governance to achieve sustainable outcomes.
Benefit sharing from a multilevel governance perspectiveCIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation was delivered by Anne M Larson, January 2016, in Brussels.
It examines the opportunity, transaction and implementation costs of REDD+ at national and subnational levels, multilevel governance and rights, and assesses perspectives of equity at different levels.
Session 6.4 are innovation platforms possible institutions for integrated nrm...World Agroforestry (ICRAF)
This document discusses innovation platforms (IPs) as institutions for integrated natural resource management (INRM) at the landscape level. It uses the case study of the Kapchorwa District Landcare Chapter (KADLACC) in Uganda. KADLACC is an IP established through the AGILE concept to address challenges like declining vegetation/soil fertility and conflicts through collective action. It facilitates integrated development planning and farmer learning. Major interventions include strengthening local government involvement in NRM planning and developing market linkages. Key results include increased tree planting, community bylaws for watershed management, and income generation. Outcomes are reduced grazing/landslides, increased production/income, and strengthened community cohesion, gender balancing and youth engagement
Presentation by Phil Franks and Andrea Quesada at the Global Landscapes Forum 2015, in Paris, France alongside COP21. For more information go to: www.landscapes.org.
Presented by Manuel R. Guariguata (CIFOR) at the World Conference on Ecological Restoration (SER 2017) in Foz do Iguassu, Paraná (Brazil), on August 28, 2017.
Session: Symposium – Deciphering the land: Using landscape attributes to estimate the potential for natural regeneration of tropical forests.
Joint forest management (JFM) involves village communities and state forest departments regenerating and conserving forests through contracts specifying shared authority, responsibilities, and benefits. Two early pilot experiments took place in the 1970s in West Bengal and Haryana. JFM projects now operate in Orissa, Himachal Pradesh, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, and Karnataka, providing employment and environmental benefits by increasing forest cover and biodiversity protection through community involvement.
Forest tenure reform implementation: Perspectives from national and sub-natio...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Tuti Herawati Hadis, from the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), at the XVI Biennial IASC Conference ‘Practicing the commons: self-governance, cooperation, and institutional change’, in Utrecht, the Netherlands, on July 11, 2017.
Making Climate-Smart Agriculture Work for the PoorCIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation by Henry Neufeldt from ICRAF talks about climate-smart agriculture, the key areas of science innovation there, some farmer climate coping strategies, the constrains, the benefits and the key messages concerning CSA.
Governance, rights and the role of politics in redd+ equity discoursesCIFOR-ICRAF
Presentation by Grace Wong, Maria Brockhaus, Lasse Loft, Pham Thu Thuy, and Anastasia Yang at the Global Landscapes Forum 2015, in Paris, France alongside COP21. For more information go to: www.landscapes.org.
How Landscape Approaches Support National Programs and GoalsCIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation by Peter Besseau from the International Model Forest Network focuses on the why of landscapes approaches, what a model forest is, its framework and what was learned from working on a landscape scale.
This document discusses traditional natural resource management in Zambia and its decline, as well as solutions and regeneration efforts. [1] Traditional systems involved sustainable practices like mosaic burning, mixed crops, and planned grazing. [2] European invasion disrupted these systems through activities like sport hunting, mono-cropping, and clear-felling. This led to environmental degradation, wildlife declines, and poverty. [3] Solutions discussed include farmland and landscape regeneration through practices like FMNR (farmer-managed natural regeneration) and holistic management, as well as community-based natural resource management. The goal is environmental, economic, and social stability through regenerative practices managed by local communities.
This concept note details parallel session 3 at the ASFN 6th conference at Inle Lake in June 2015. The theme is "Management and Governance of Dynamic Forest and Agriculture Landscapes".
Greater than the sum of its parts? Lessons from a collaborative, multi-actor,...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Nining Liswanti, from the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), at the XVI Biennial IASC Conference ‘Practicing the commons: self-governance, cooperation, and institutional change’, in Utrecht, the Netherlands, on July 14, 2017.
Exploring Participatory Prospective Analysis: A collaborative, scenario-based...CIFOR-ICRAF
This document summarizes a study exploring participatory prospective analysis (PPA), a collaborative, scenario-based approach for analyzing and anticipating the consequences of tenure reform implementation in Indonesia. The study was conducted in two sites in Lampung and Maluku provinces. Through a PPA process involving stakeholders, the study identified key drivers of tenure security, developed future scenarios, and created action plans. At both sites, scenarios and action plans focused on improving governance, recognizing customary rights, increasing regional budgets, and empowering communities. The national recommendations from the study address improving coordination, developing forest management units and policies, establishing local regulations, and increasing community development programs.
This 3-day workshop covers topics related to common pool resources, collective action, and property rights. Day 1 introduces CGIAR and discusses agriculture and common pool resources. Day 2 defines key concepts like common pool resources, collective action, and property rights. It examines the tragedy of the commons and strategies to address it. Day 3 looks at drivers of tenure insecurity, institutional arrangements for strengthening tenure security, and tools and indicators for monitoring and evaluation. The workshop aims to provide knowledge and frameworks to support sustainable governance and management of natural resources.
1. The document calls for papers for an Africa Regional Meeting of the International Association for the Study of the Commons to be held in Cape Town, South Africa in April 2013.
2. The meeting themes focus on defragmenting African natural resource management and responsive forest governance, with sub-themes such as institutional choice and recognition in forest governance, embracing local indigenous knowledge systems, and the effects of urbanization and commercialization.
3. Abstracts are due by January 21, 2013 and should follow the specified format, with the program committee being chaired by researchers from Botswana and South Africa.
The Local Wisdom to Sustainable Forest Management of Indigenous People in Eas...inventionjournals
The purpose of this research is to describe how local wisdom influencing the indigenous people behavior to sustain the forest resources, what makes local wisdom able to influencing indigenous people to sustain the forest resources and what does the indigenous people in East Kalimantan province needs in order make them continue to conserve forest resources as an effort to maximize their strategic role in sustainable forest management. Based on the research result of the data shown that local wisdom can influence the behavior of indigenous people because for them, forests are the storehouses of life, the nature damage could resulting negative consequences for the people themselves. The local wisdom form is customary law and, has forcing characteristic, which is sanctions received in case of violation, so its able to makes them behaving to conserve the forest resources. Then, the indigenous people needs fully support from various parties, especially from the local governments such as infrastructure, in order to make them keep continue to conserve the forest resources
This document discusses a study on implementing an integrated forest management model in East Java, Indonesia by empowering local leadership forums. The study aims to establish better communication between local governments and Perhutani, a state-owned forestry corporation, to improve forest management. Currently, their lack of coordination has led to partial problem solving. The study uses legal and sociological research methods, including analyzing local laws and regulations, to develop recommendations for clarifying the role of local leadership forums in integrated forest management. The findings could inform revisions to Indonesia's forestry laws.
CIFOR’s contribution to ASFCC: Research Results from 2014-2015CIFOR-ICRAF
This document summarizes CIFOR's contributions to the ASEAN Social Forestry Network from 2014-2015. CIFOR conducted research on swidden systems and livelihoods to understand their relevance for REDD+ and how swidden communities can participate in and benefit from REDD+. Key research results included analyzing social networks and governance in swidden communities, mapping land use dynamics and carbon stocks, and understanding rural population movements through migration. Planned future activities include further research, policy reviews, knowledge sharing, and capacity building activities in Indonesia, Laos, and Vietnam.
The document summarizes the development of community forestry in Nepal and its achievements in promoting sustainable development. It discusses how community forestry has evolved over time through various policies and workshops. Key achievements highlighted include improved forest governance through community management, sustainable forest management practices, and enhanced local livelihoods and sustainability through community enterprises and income generation activities.
Institutionalizing interaction between local people and protection forest a m...Alexander Decker
1. The document discusses a study evaluating a forest stewardship program in Mount Arjuna, Indonesia that aims to change local communities' threatening attitudes toward the protected forest.
2. The study finds that local communities engage in illegal wood removal, land use change, charcoal making, and forest fires in the protected area due to seeing it as an open access area with no enforcement of rules.
3. The forest stewardship program involves reforestation and appointing local stewards to care for planted areas in exchange for livestock. However, the integrated economic programs proposed have failed due to incompatibility with local practices or being too complex.
In Ethiopian context,
‘PFM is a working partnership between the concerned government institutions and the local communities for forest management based on negotiated and defined roles, responsibilities and agreed upon benefit sharing arrangements aimed at enhancing forest conditions and improving livelihoods of rural communities’
PFM in Ethiopia can be understood as a management regime aimed at achieving better and sustainable forest development through balancing conservation and utilization by mobilizing, organizing, participating and transferring management responsibilities to local communities living in and around forest areas
Accommodating power and inclusivity in integrated landscape approaches: what...CIFOR-ICRAF
This document summarizes a presentation on how political ecology can help improve integrated landscape approaches. It discusses how political ecology examines power imbalances, competing knowledge claims, and discourse analysis. It provides examples from Ghana, Zambia, and elsewhere of applying these concepts. The document concludes that political ecology is needed to understand landscape governance politics and negotiate diverse stakeholder interests, in order to achieve more equitable and sustainable landscape outcomes.
Multi-level governance and decision-making on forests and PFES in VietnamCIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation was delivered by Anastasia Yang to the Vietnam Forest Protection and Development Fund in Hanoi, 11th November.
Topics discussed include arguments for researching multilevel governance, site selection, and an overview of the global study itself.
This document discusses community participation in co-management of protected areas in Bangladesh. It finds that community participation is key to the success of co-management. The Nishorgo Support Project in Bangladesh aims to implement co-management for forest management, and the document examines the success of this project in terms of community participation. It identifies some challenges to effective community participation, such as lack of time and funding, complexity of natural resource issues, lack of clear participation frameworks, and heterogeneity within communities.
3rd Mekong Forum on Water, Food & Energy 2013. Overview and Agenda for Sessions 3 &5: Extending the benefits of hydropower: Clever suggestion or realistic goal?
This document is Karl-Erik Johansson's doctoral thesis submitted to the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. The thesis examines barriers and opportunities for introducing agroforestry and community-based forestry among food insecure households in Eastern Africa. It analyzes these issues at three scales: negotiations between a Swedish NGO and donor agency; an agroforestry project in Tanzania; and community forest groups in Eastern and Southern Africa. The thesis identifies eight barriers including policy dilemmas between organizations, lack of education, insecure land tenure, and changing climate. It also identifies four opportunities such as improving infrastructure and growing demand for forest products. Overall, the thesis concludes that interactions between social, political, and economic structures at multiple governance levels
This study finds that there is strong support for community level approaches to forest management. Securing community forest tenure through clarifying land claims and integrating local land tenure into spatial planning is a key step to achieving sustainable forest management.
Mangrove governance and tenure: Insights for policy and practice from selecte...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Esther Nyambura Mwangi, from the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), at the XVI Biennial IASC Conference ‘Practicing the commons: self-governance, cooperation, and institutional change’, in Utrecht, the Netherlands, on July 14, 2017.
Exploring motivations for volunteers in nature conservation to inform local p...SUSAN MARANGO
This document summarizes a study that explored the motivations of volunteers involved in nature conservation projects in Lincolnshire, UK. The study found that volunteers' primary motivation was interest in environmental protection. It also found that local conservation activities addressed themes of sustainable development better than local policies. The study concludes that involving volunteers in local policymaking could help inform policies with local knowledge, complementing expert knowledge and leading to more effective nature conservation policies that translate to local action.
Similar to Introduction to stream 5: Inclusive governance for sustainable landscapes opening (20)
Mejorando la estimación de emisiones GEI conversión bosque degradado a planta...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Kristell Hergoualc'h (Scientist, CIFOR-ICRAF) at Workshop “Lecciones para el monitoreo transparente: Experiencias de la Amazonia peruana” on 7 Mei 2024 in Lima, Peru.
Inclusión y transparencia como clave del éxito para el mecanismo de transfere...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Lauren Cooper and Rowenn Kalman (Michigan State University) at Workshop “Lecciones para el monitoreo transparente: Experiencias de la Amazonia peruana” on 7 Mei 2024 in Lima, Peru.
Avances de Perú con relación al marco de transparencia del Acuerdo de ParísCIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Berioska Quispe Estrada (Directora General de Cambio Climático y Desertificación) at Workshop “Lecciones para el monitoreo transparente: Experiencias de la Amazonia peruana” on 7 Mei 2024 in Lima, Peru.
Land tenure and forest landscape restoration in Cameroon and MadagascarCIFOR-ICRAF
FLR is an adaptive process that brings people (including women, men, youth, local and indigenous communities) together to identify, negotiate and implement practices that restore and enhance ecological and social functionality of forest landscapes that have been deforested or degraded.
ReSI-NoC - Strategie de mise en oeuvre.pdfCIFOR-ICRAF
Re nforcer les S ystèmes d’ I nnovations
agrosylvopastorales économiquement
rentables, écologiquement durables et
socialement équitables dans la région du
No rd C ameroun
ReSI-NoC: Introduction au contexte du projetCIFOR-ICRAF
Renforcer les systèmes d’innovation agricole en vue de
promouvoir des systèmes de production agricole et
d’élevage économiquement rentables, écologiquement
durables et socialement équitables dans la région du
Nord au Cameroun (ReSI-NoC)
Renforcer les Systèmes d’Innovations agrosylvopastorales économiquement renta...CIFOR-ICRAF
Renforcer les Systèmes d’Innovations agrosylvopastorales économiquement rentables, écologiquement durables et socialement équitables dans la région du
Nord Cameroun
Introducing Blue Carbon Deck seeking for actionable partnershipsCIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Daniel Murdiyarso (Principal Scientist, CIFOR-ICRAF) at the "Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation with Mangrove Ecosystems: Introducing Mangrove Ecosystems Strategies to the Climate Change Agenda" event in Bogor, 29 April 2024.
A Wide Range of Eco System Services with MangrovesCIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Mihyun Seol and Himlal Baral (CIFOR-ICRAF) at the "Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation with Mangrove Ecosystems: Introducing Mangrove Ecosystems Strategies to the Climate Change Agenda" event in Bogor, 29 April 2024.
Presented by Citra Gilang (Research Consultant, CIFOR-ICRAF) at the "Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation with Mangrove Ecosystems: Introducing Mangrove Ecosystems Strategies to the Climate Change Agenda" event in Bogor, 29 April 2024.
Peat land Restoration Project in HLG LonderangCIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Hyoung Gyun Kim (Korea–Indonesia Forest Cooperation Center) at the "Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation with Mangrove Ecosystems: Introducing Mangrove Ecosystems Strategies to the Climate Change Agenda" event in Bogor, 29 April 2024.
Sungsang Mangrove Restoration and Ecotourism (SMART): A participatory action ...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Beni Okarda (Senior Research Officer, CIFOR-ICRAF) at the "Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation with Mangrove Ecosystems: Introducing Mangrove Ecosystems Strategies to the Climate Change Agenda" event in Bogor, 29 April 2024.
Coastal and mangrove vulnerability assessment In the Northern Coast of Java, ...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Phidju Marrin Sagala (Research Consultant, CIFOR-ICRAF) at the "Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation with Mangrove Ecosystems: Introducing Mangrove Ecosystems Strategies to the Climate Change Agenda" event in Bogor, 29 April 2024.
Carbon Stock Assessment in Banten Province and Demak, Central Java, IndonesiaCIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Milkah Royna (Student Intern, CIFOR-ICRAF) at the "Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation with Mangrove Ecosystems: Introducing Mangrove Ecosystems Strategies to the Climate Change Agenda" event in Bogor, 29 April 2024.
Cooperative Mangrove Project: Introduction, Scope, and PerspectivesCIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Bora Lee (Warm-Temperate and Subtropical Forest Research Center, NIFoS Jeju, Republic of Korea) at the "Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation with Mangrove Ecosystems: Introducing Mangrove Ecosystems Strategies to the Climate Change Agenda" event in Bogor, 29 April 2024.
Improving the viability of probiotics by encapsulation methods for developmen...Open Access Research Paper
The popularity of functional foods among scientists and common people has been increasing day by day. Awareness and modernization make the consumer think better regarding food and nutrition. Now a day’s individual knows very well about the relation between food consumption and disease prevalence. Humans have a diversity of microbes in the gut that together form the gut microflora. Probiotics are the health-promoting live microbial cells improve host health through gut and brain connection and fighting against harmful bacteria. Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus are the two bacterial genera which are considered to be probiotic. These good bacteria are facing challenges of viability. There are so many factors such as sensitivity to heat, pH, acidity, osmotic effect, mechanical shear, chemical components, freezing and storage time as well which affects the viability of probiotics in the dairy food matrix as well as in the gut. Multiple efforts have been done in the past and ongoing in present for these beneficial microbial population stability until their destination in the gut. One of a useful technique known as microencapsulation makes the probiotic effective in the diversified conditions and maintain these microbe’s community to the optimum level for achieving targeted benefits. Dairy products are found to be an ideal vehicle for probiotic incorporation. It has been seen that the encapsulated microbial cells show higher viability than the free cells in different processing and storage conditions as well as against bile salts in the gut. They make the food functional when incorporated, without affecting the product sensory characteristics.
Evolving Lifecycles with High Resolution Site Characterization (HRSC) and 3-D...Joshua Orris
The incorporation of a 3DCSM and completion of HRSC provided a tool for enhanced, data-driven, decisions to support a change in remediation closure strategies. Currently, an approved pilot study has been obtained to shut-down the remediation systems (ISCO, P&T) and conduct a hydraulic study under non-pumping conditions. A separate micro-biological bench scale treatability study was competed that yielded positive results for an emerging innovative technology. As a result, a field pilot study has commenced with results expected in nine-twelve months. With the results of the hydraulic study, field pilot studies and an updated risk assessment leading site monitoring optimization cost lifecycle savings upwards of $15MM towards an alternatively evolved best available technology remediation closure strategy.
Optimizing Post Remediation Groundwater Performance with Enhanced Microbiolog...Joshua Orris
Results of geophysics and pneumatic injection pilot tests during 2003 – 2007 yielded significant positive results for injection delivery design and contaminant mass treatment, resulting in permanent shut-down of an existing groundwater Pump & Treat system.
Accessible source areas were subsequently removed (2011) by soil excavation and treated with the placement of Emulsified Vegetable Oil EVO and zero-valent iron ZVI to accelerate treatment of impacted groundwater in overburden and weathered fractured bedrock. Post pilot test and post remediation groundwater monitoring has included analyses of CVOCs, organic fatty acids, dissolved gases and QuantArray® -Chlor to quantify key microorganisms (e.g., Dehalococcoides, Dehalobacter, etc.) and functional genes (e.g., vinyl chloride reductase, methane monooxygenase, etc.) to assess potential for reductive dechlorination and aerobic cometabolism of CVOCs.
In 2022, the first commercial application of MetaArray™ was performed at the site. MetaArray™ utilizes statistical analysis, such as principal component analysis and multivariate analysis to provide evidence that reductive dechlorination is active or even that it is slowing. This creates actionable data allowing users to save money by making important site management decisions earlier.
The results of the MetaArray™ analysis’ support vector machine (SVM) identified groundwater monitoring wells with a 80% confidence that were characterized as either Limited for Reductive Decholorination or had a High Reductive Reduction Dechlorination potential. The results of MetaArray™ will be used to further optimize the site’s post remediation monitoring program for monitored natural attenuation.
RoHS stands for Restriction of Hazardous Substances, which is also known as t...vijaykumar292010
RoHS stands for Restriction of Hazardous Substances, which is also known as the Directive 2002/95/EC. It includes the restrictions for the use of certain hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment. RoHS is a WEEE (Waste of Electrical and Electronic Equipment).
Kinetic studies on malachite green dye adsorption from aqueous solutions by A...Open Access Research Paper
Water polluted by dyestuffs compounds is a global threat to health and the environment; accordingly, we prepared a green novel sorbent chemical and Physical system from an algae, chitosan and chitosan nanoparticle and impregnated with algae with chitosan nanocomposite for the sorption of Malachite green dye from water. The algae with chitosan nanocomposite by a simple method and used as a recyclable and effective adsorbent for the removal of malachite green dye from aqueous solutions. Algae, chitosan, chitosan nanoparticle and algae with chitosan nanocomposite were characterized using different physicochemical methods. The functional groups and chemical compounds found in algae, chitosan, chitosan algae, chitosan nanoparticle, and chitosan nanoparticle with algae were identified using FTIR, SEM, and TGADTA/DTG techniques. The optimal adsorption conditions, different dosages, pH and Temperature the amount of algae with chitosan nanocomposite were determined. At optimized conditions and the batch equilibrium studies more than 99% of the dye was removed. The adsorption process data matched well kinetics showed that the reaction order for dye varied with pseudo-first order and pseudo-second order. Furthermore, the maximum adsorption capacity of the algae with chitosan nanocomposite toward malachite green dye reached as high as 15.5mg/g, respectively. Finally, multiple times reusing of algae with chitosan nanocomposite and removing dye from a real wastewater has made it a promising and attractive option for further practical applications.
Introduction to stream 5: Inclusive governance for sustainable landscapes opening
1. 1
Stream 5: Inclusive governance for
sustainable landscapes
When and how can multiple landscape objectives be equitably
reconciled among different actors and across scales?
2. 2
Session 1: Participatory processes in
landscape governance and management
What does accountability look like?
What mechanisms work for holding people accountable?
Thursday, 17 September
Chair: Anne Larson
Keynote: Jonathan Fox
The Political Construction of Accountability Keywords
3. 3
Session 1: Participatory processes in landscape
governance and management
What institutions favor or hinder transparency, accountability, and
participation in decision-making with respect to landscape
governance?
What kinds of approaches or tools can support inclusive participation
in governance processes?
What do we mean by participation and what kind of participation
actually makes a difference for people and landscapes?
4. 4
Session 1: Participatory processes in landscape
governance and management
Panelists
Juan Pablo Sarmiento: Participation in a state of (climate) urgency: Lessons from a
comparative study of multistakeholder forums
Pham Thu Thuy: The politics of Payment for Forest Environmental Services refusal in Vietnam
Swetha Peteru: Participatory use of a tool to assess policy and governance conditions
Ani S. Adiwinata: Operationalizing the landscape approach in Indonesia: Landscape
governance in fostering an integrated landscape management approach
Marlène Elias: Unpacking ‘gender’ in joint forest management: Lessons from two Indian states
Priscilla Wainaina: Incentives for landscape restoration: Lessons from Shinyanga, Tanzania
Asri Joni: Strengthening Participatory Process of Reconciling Forest, Agriculture and Other
Land Uses Data at the Local Level in Indonesia
Nafiesa Ilahibaks: Assessing governance in the landscape of the upper Suriname River area
Presentations
2 Min pitch from
asynchronous PPT
Posters
5. 5
Session 2a: Land and Forest Tenure: Implications for
Sustainable Management and Inclusion
Does/how does the formalization of land rights influence the
achievement of multiple economic, social, environmental outcomes?
What are effective mechanisms for securing the tenure rights of
marginalized groups?
Wednesday, 23 September
Chair: Marlène Elias
6. 6
Session 2a: Land and Forest Tenure: Implications for
Sustainable Management and Inclusion
Panelists
Douglas Ombogoh: Comparing property rights regimes to understand livestock management decisions
on degraded forest margins in Western Kenya
Divine Foundjem-Tita: Farmers’ perceptions and preferences about land tenure security: Implications for
sustainable landscape management, a Southern Cameroon case study
Iliana Monterroso Ibarra: Gender-responsive forest tenure reforms? Lessons from Indonesia, Peru and
Uganda
Habtemariam Kassa: In the face of persistent challenges, would Ethiopia achieve its FLR target by 2030?
Anne Larson: Participation for inclusive and sustainable landscapes, or why achieving more equitable
and resilient multi-stakeholder forums requires reflexive and adaptive learning
Mieke Bourne; Policy gaps and opportunities for scaling agroforestry to meet climate change,
biodiversity and restoration challenges in Sub-Saharan Africa
Rocío Lilibeth Castillo Cruz; The contribution of Community Forestry to the Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs): Case of community forest concessions in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Petén, Guatemala
Presentations
2 Min pitch
from
asynchronous
PPT
Posters
7. 7
Session 2b: Landscape and jurisdictional approaches for
governance and sustainability
What principles, criteria and indicators can help guide and monitor
process effectiveness and efficiency in landscape and jurisdictional
approaches?
What mechanisms can support synergies and reconcile the priorities
and objectives of diverse stakeholders in complex socio-ecological
systems?
Wednesday, 23 September
Chair: Peter Minang
8. 8
Session 2b: Landscape and jurisdictional approaches for
governance and sustainability
Panelists
Colas Chervier: A tentative causal chain to assess the effectiveness of jurisdictional approaches to
reduced deforestation
Judith Nzyoka: Landscape democracy and sustainable land restoration: Evidence from Shinyanga,
Tanzania
Frederico Brandão: The polity behind state-level policies to reduce deforestation: The case of Pará
in the Brazilian Amazon
Alfa Nugraha: Empowering Local Governments for Low Carbon Development Planning in Indonesia
Veronica Mercado: Analysis of governance in urban wetlands: A case study on the Las Piñas –
Parañaque Critical Habitat and Ecotourism Area (LPPCHEA), Metro Manila, Philippines
Desmiwati Wong: Actor’s position and relation in the initiation of conservation sites extension,
Western Java, Indonesia
Feri Johana: Incentives for landscape restoration: Lessons from Shinyanga, Tanzania.
Mukhammad Thoha Zulkarnain: One Map Initiative to support Land-use and Development
Planning in Papua and South Sumatra, Indonesia
Presentations
2 Min pitch from
asynchronous PPT
Posters &
asynchronous
PPTs