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Forest People Interfaces understanding community forestry and biocultural diversity /

This book aims at both academics and professionals in the field of forest-people interfaces. It takes the reader on a journey through four major themes that have emerged since the initiation of 'social forestry' in the 1970s: non-timber forest products and agroforestry; community-based nat...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor Corporativo: SpringerLink (Online service)
Otros Autores: Arts, Bas (Editor ), van Bommel, Séverine (Editor ), Ros-Tonen, Mirjam (Editor ), Verschoor, Gerard (Editor )
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Wageningen : Wageningen Academic Publishers : Imprint: Wageningen Academic Publishers, 2012.
Edición:1st ed. 2012.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto Completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Preface
  • 1. Forest-people interfaces: from local creativity to global concerns
  • 1.1. Introduction
  • 1.2. Non-timber forest products and agroforestry
  • 1.3. Community-based natural resource management
  • 1.4. Biocultural diversity
  • 1.5. Forest governance
  • 1.6. Conclusion
  • References
  • Part I. Non-timber forest products and agroforestry
  • 2. Non-timber forest product extraction as a productive bricolage Process
  • Abstract
  • 2.1. Introduction
  • 2.2. Non-timber forest products: general characteristics and their role in peoples' livelihoods
  • 2.3. NTFP production as productive bricolage
  • 2.4. The need to consider levels of scale: adding a political ecological perspective
  • 2.5. Conclusion
  • Acknowledgements
  • References
  • 3. Gum and resin-producing species in the drylands of Ethiopia: productive bricolage footprints on the landscape
  • Abstract
  • 3.1. Introduction
  • 3.2. Dry forests in Ethiopia
  • 3.3. Gum and resin in the dryland livelihoods of Ethiopia: livelihood strategies and dynamics
  • 3.4. Status of the woodlands dominated by Boswellia species in the drylands of Ethiopia
  • 3.5. Understanding the management status of gum and resin-producing woodlands
  • 3.6. Discussion: productive bricolage and landscape management
  • 3.7. Conclusion
  • References
  • 4. Land-use dynamics in enset-based agroforestry homegardens in Ethiopia
  • Abstract
  • 4.1. Introduction
  • 4.2. Structure and composition of enset-coffee agroforestry homegardens
  • 4.3. The central role of enset in homegardens and livelihoods
  • 4.4. Dynamics in enset area composition
  • 4.5. Implications of the dynamics in enset-coffee agroforestry homegardens for agricultural sustainability
  • 4.6. Conclusions
  • References
  • 5. Woodfuel and producers' livelihoods in the Congo Basin
  • Abstract
  • 5.1. Introduction
  • 5.2. Theoretical outlook
  • 5.3. Methodology
  • 5.4. Results
  • 5.5. Discussion
  • 5.6. Conclusion
  • Acknowledgements
  • References
  • Part II. Community-based natural resource management
  • 6. Discourses of community forestry
  • Abstract
  • 6.1. Introduction
  • 6.2. Environmental discourses
  • 6.3. Discourses of community forestry
  • 6.4. Assessing the CF discourse
  • 6.5. Community forestry discourses: quo vadis?
  • 6.6. Conclusions
  • References
  • 7. Conservancies in Namibia: a discourse in action
  • Abstract
  • 7.1. Introduction
  • 7.2. The empirical setting
  • 7.3. The theoretical setting: analysing conservancies
  • 7.4. The community question: conservancy dynamics
  • 7.5. New regimes of power?
  • 7.6. Conclusions
  • References
  • 8. REDD+: what's in it for community forest management?
  • Abstract
  • 8.1. Introduction
  • 8.2. The nature of international REDD+ policy
  • 8.3. The prominence of CFM in national REDD+ plans
  • 8.4. The niche of CFM within REDD+
  • 8.5. The commercial value of the carbon services delivered by CFM
  • 8.6. Organising payments for communities
  • 8.7. The dangers of recentralisation and the establishment of safeguards and rights
  • 8.8. Regulation, markets or negotiation?
  • References
  • 9. Learning from the actors: the rise and demise of a CBNRM initiative in Mexico
  • Abstract
  • 9.1. Introduction
  • 9.2. Constructing the organization
  • 9.3. Putting the CBNRM initiative into practice
  • 9.4. Demise
  • 9.5. Conclusion
  • References
  • Part III. Biocultural diversity
  • 10. Perceptions and values of local landscapes: implications for the conservation of biocultural diversity and intangible heritage
  • Abstract
  • 10.1. Introduction
  • 10.2. Methods
  • 10.3. Results
  • 10.4. Discussion
  • 10.5. Conclusion and implications
  • Acknowledgments
  • References
  • 11. Biocultural diversity in the Netherlands: from ecologically noble savages towards biocultural creatives
  • Abstract
  • 11.1. Introduction
  • 11.2. The cultural roots of biodiversity conservation
  • 11.3. From 'ecologically nobles savages' to 'biocultural creatives'
  • 11.4. Our conceptual approach to biocultural creativity
  • 11.5. How Dutch citizens interact with nature
  • 11.6. Biocultural creatives
  • 11.7. The future of biocultural diversity in the Netherlands
  • References
  • 12. 'Diversity (still) at stake': a farmers' perspective on biodiversity and conservation in Western Mexico
  • Abstract
  • 12.1. Introduction
  • 12.2. Diving into theory
  • 12.3. Research design
  • 12.4. Farmers' classification of the landscape
  • 12.5. Succession management and landscape patchiness
  • 12.6. The organisation of time and space
  • 12.7. Transformations in resource diversity
  • 12.8. Reorganisation of time and space
  • 12.9. Variation in resource diversity transformations
  • 12.10. Discussion and conclusion
  • References
  • 13. Governing biocultural diversity in mosaic landscapes
  • Abstract
  • 13.1. From managing biocultural diversity to governing mosaic landscapes
  • 13.2. Biocultural diversity, mosaic landscapes and governance defined
  • 13.3. The spatial dimension of governance: governance of place
  • 13.4. Enhancing landscape governance: a learning approach
  • 13.5. Landscape learning in practice
  • 13.6. Conclusion
  • References
  • 14. The (onto)politics of classifying biocultural diversity: a tale of chaos, order and control
  • Abstract
  • 14.1. Introduction: biocultural diversity as an ordering device
  • 14.2. Classification systems, boundaries and performativity
  • 14.3. Biocultural diversity in Wiersum's research
  • 14.4. Classifications in research on biocultural diversity
  • 14.5. The (onto)politics of classifying biocultural diversity
  • 14.6. Performativity: the social and material implications of classifying biocultural diversity
  • References
  • Part IV. Forest governance
  • 15. Forest governance: a state of the art review
  • Abstract
  • 15.1. Introduction
  • 15.2. Governance
  • 15.3. Forest governance
  • 15.4. Forest governmentality
  • 15.5. Triple G
  • 15.6. Conclusion
  • Acknowledgement
  • References
  • 16. Exploring forest governance in Tanzania
  • Abstract
  • 16.1. Introduction
  • 16.2. Background information
  • 16.3. Contemporary forest governance in Tanzania
  • 16.4. Impact of new forest governance on forest resources and livelihoods of local people
  • 16.5. Conclusion
  • References
  • 17. Institutional bricolage in community forestry: an agenda for future research
  • Abstract
  • 17.1. Introduction
  • 17.2. Institutional thinking in community-based forest management
  • 17.3. Institutional bricolage
  • 17.4. Key elements of bricolage
  • 17.5. Practices of institutional bricolage
  • 17.6. Conclusions
  • References
  • 18. Forest market governance: exploring a practice-based approach
  • Abstract
  • 18.1. Introduction
  • 18.2. Setting the stage: markets from a disciplinary view
  • 18.3. Towards a new approach: markets as practices
  • 18.4. Implications of researching markets as practices
  • 18.5. Discussion and conclusion
  • References.