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Participatory Forest Management in Odisha - Implementation, Outcomes and Livelihood Impacts (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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Participatory Forest Management in Odisha - Implementation, Outcomes and Livelihood Impacts (Hardcover)
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Loot Price R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Based on original survey data and other source materials, this
study analyses the functioning of participatory forest management
(PFM) in Orissa, both due to the local people's own initiatives and
through the state supported JFM programme and their impact on the
livelihood. The working of the PFM has not been satisfactory due to
poor governance, weak local institutions, lack of effective
participation of women and the poor, unequal product distribution,
lower access to forest resource. Lack of robust intra and inter
village conflicts management among different stakeholders has
weakened proper management of resources; created problems in
benefit sharing, usufruct rights, and boundary disputes over the
forest area. A number factors - low literacy and awareness of the
forest related policies among the primary stakeholders, high
dependence of poor on traders and others for land and credit, low
bargaining power of women within PFM institutions, and the presence
of forest mafias - have contributed to it. PFM has led to improved
forest condition, and increased access to a variety of forest
products for the households. But improvement in the livelihood
conditions of participant households has been marginal due to a
number of factors including no value addition to collected
products, marginal improvement in market relation for NTFP sale,
high dependence on informal loan at onerous terms and conditions
and low level of human capital development. PFM has raised the
expectation of members, and now it has to improve the economic
conditions of the poor. The authors have suggested a number of
policies including - democratization of Forest Protection
Committees, assured tennurial rights to the local communities,
recognition of multiple participatory management practices
including JFM and Community Forest Management, recognition of
forest based subsistence use, promotion of value addition and
forest based enterprises, improvement of marketing networks through
collaboration with other local institutions, increased investment
in forest sector and effective coordination with other
stakeholders. The book will be of interest to all those who have
interest in Environment and Natural Resource Economics and Forest
policies.
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