Rethinking Participatory Forest Management in Tanzania

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Standard

Rethinking Participatory Forest Management in Tanzania. / Sungusia, Eliezeri; Lund, Jens Friis; Hansen, Christian Pilegaard; Amanzi, Numan Said; Ngaga, Yonika M. ; Mbeyale, Gimbage ; Treue, Thorsten; Meilby, Henrik.

Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2020.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Sungusia, E, Lund, JF, Hansen, CP, Amanzi, NS, Ngaga, YM, Mbeyale, G, Treue, T & Meilby, H 2020 'Rethinking Participatory Forest Management in Tanzania' Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen. <https://econpapers.repec.org/RePEc:foi:wpaper:2020_02>

APA

Sungusia, E., Lund, J. F., Hansen, C. P., Amanzi, N. S., Ngaga, Y. M., Mbeyale, G., Treue, T., & Meilby, H. (2020). Rethinking Participatory Forest Management in Tanzania. Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen. IFRO Working Paper Nr. 2020/02 https://econpapers.repec.org/RePEc:foi:wpaper:2020_02

Vancouver

Sungusia E, Lund JF, Hansen CP, Amanzi NS, Ngaga YM, Mbeyale G o.a. Rethinking Participatory Forest Management in Tanzania. Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen. 2020.

Author

Sungusia, Eliezeri ; Lund, Jens Friis ; Hansen, Christian Pilegaard ; Amanzi, Numan Said ; Ngaga, Yonika M. ; Mbeyale, Gimbage ; Treue, Thorsten ; Meilby, Henrik. / Rethinking Participatory Forest Management in Tanzania. Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2020. (IFRO Working Paper ; Nr. 2020/02).

Bibtex

@techreport{bdba1ad2f54e406394b2661d2a7eb63c,
title = "Rethinking Participatory Forest Management in Tanzania",
abstract = "Around 20 years ago, Tanzania adopted the policy of participatory forest management (PFM) to create incentives for increasing villagers{\textquoteright} participation in forest management. The timing is thus fitting to reflect on the achievements and challenges of the PFM process so far. There have certainly been successes. Nonetheless, challenges remain. Notably, there is a mismatch between participation ideals and the way the process has been framed, or structured, as well as outcomes on the ground in terms of actual participation and forest management practices. This working paper presents experiences with PFM from a handful of sites across the country, relying on existing published literature as well as our own research experiences. Having been involved in a number of major PFM research projects in Tanzania, we, the authors, have a combined experience of more than 20 years of conducting research in this field. We summarize important findings that explain the observed chasm between participation ideals and local realities and offer some recommendations. While some of our diagnoses and recommendations may contradict conventional wisdom in forestry, we believe that this report contributes valuable insights to the continued efforts to further sustainable forestry in Tanzania. We begin by outlining the global ideals of participatory forestry. We then present an overview of the realities of PFM as they appear in existing research. We do not attempt an exhaustive survey of literature or our own research. Rather, we emphasize issues concerning the framing of PFM as a bureaucratic and scientific project, and how that shapes it in practice. We then present case studies illustrating some of the core problems with PFM before concluding with some general recommendations for improving participatory forestry policy and guidelines.",
author = "Eliezeri Sungusia and Lund, {Jens Friis} and Hansen, {Christian Pilegaard} and Amanzi, {Numan Said} and Ngaga, {Yonika M.} and Gimbage Mbeyale and Thorsten Treue and Henrik Meilby",
year = "2020",
language = "English",
series = "IFRO Working Paper ",
number = "2020/02",
publisher = "Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Rethinking Participatory Forest Management in Tanzania

AU - Sungusia, Eliezeri

AU - Lund, Jens Friis

AU - Hansen, Christian Pilegaard

AU - Amanzi, Numan Said

AU - Ngaga, Yonika M.

AU - Mbeyale, Gimbage

AU - Treue, Thorsten

AU - Meilby, Henrik

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Around 20 years ago, Tanzania adopted the policy of participatory forest management (PFM) to create incentives for increasing villagers’ participation in forest management. The timing is thus fitting to reflect on the achievements and challenges of the PFM process so far. There have certainly been successes. Nonetheless, challenges remain. Notably, there is a mismatch between participation ideals and the way the process has been framed, or structured, as well as outcomes on the ground in terms of actual participation and forest management practices. This working paper presents experiences with PFM from a handful of sites across the country, relying on existing published literature as well as our own research experiences. Having been involved in a number of major PFM research projects in Tanzania, we, the authors, have a combined experience of more than 20 years of conducting research in this field. We summarize important findings that explain the observed chasm between participation ideals and local realities and offer some recommendations. While some of our diagnoses and recommendations may contradict conventional wisdom in forestry, we believe that this report contributes valuable insights to the continued efforts to further sustainable forestry in Tanzania. We begin by outlining the global ideals of participatory forestry. We then present an overview of the realities of PFM as they appear in existing research. We do not attempt an exhaustive survey of literature or our own research. Rather, we emphasize issues concerning the framing of PFM as a bureaucratic and scientific project, and how that shapes it in practice. We then present case studies illustrating some of the core problems with PFM before concluding with some general recommendations for improving participatory forestry policy and guidelines.

AB - Around 20 years ago, Tanzania adopted the policy of participatory forest management (PFM) to create incentives for increasing villagers’ participation in forest management. The timing is thus fitting to reflect on the achievements and challenges of the PFM process so far. There have certainly been successes. Nonetheless, challenges remain. Notably, there is a mismatch between participation ideals and the way the process has been framed, or structured, as well as outcomes on the ground in terms of actual participation and forest management practices. This working paper presents experiences with PFM from a handful of sites across the country, relying on existing published literature as well as our own research experiences. Having been involved in a number of major PFM research projects in Tanzania, we, the authors, have a combined experience of more than 20 years of conducting research in this field. We summarize important findings that explain the observed chasm between participation ideals and local realities and offer some recommendations. While some of our diagnoses and recommendations may contradict conventional wisdom in forestry, we believe that this report contributes valuable insights to the continued efforts to further sustainable forestry in Tanzania. We begin by outlining the global ideals of participatory forestry. We then present an overview of the realities of PFM as they appear in existing research. We do not attempt an exhaustive survey of literature or our own research. Rather, we emphasize issues concerning the framing of PFM as a bureaucratic and scientific project, and how that shapes it in practice. We then present case studies illustrating some of the core problems with PFM before concluding with some general recommendations for improving participatory forestry policy and guidelines.

M3 - Working paper

T3 - IFRO Working Paper

BT - Rethinking Participatory Forest Management in Tanzania

PB - Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen

ER -

ID: 236506848