The contested role of management plans in improving forest conditions in Nepal's community forests

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Standard

The contested role of management plans in improving forest conditions in Nepal's community forests. / Baral, S.; Meilby, H.; Chhetri, B. B. Khanal.

I: International Forestry Review, Bind 21, Nr. 1, 2019, s. 37-50.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Baral, S, Meilby, H & Chhetri, BBK 2019, 'The contested role of management plans in improving forest conditions in Nepal's community forests', International Forestry Review, bind 21, nr. 1, s. 37-50. https://doi.org/10.1505/146554819825863799

APA

Baral, S., Meilby, H., & Chhetri, B. B. K. (2019). The contested role of management plans in improving forest conditions in Nepal's community forests. International Forestry Review, 21(1), 37-50. https://doi.org/10.1505/146554819825863799

Vancouver

Baral S, Meilby H, Chhetri BBK. The contested role of management plans in improving forest conditions in Nepal's community forests. International Forestry Review. 2019;21(1):37-50. https://doi.org/10.1505/146554819825863799

Author

Baral, S. ; Meilby, H. ; Chhetri, B. B. Khanal. / The contested role of management plans in improving forest conditions in Nepal's community forests. I: International Forestry Review. 2019 ; Bind 21, Nr. 1. s. 37-50.

Bibtex

@article{0b913c330f5e44bea79fda666551626f,
title = "The contested role of management plans in improving forest conditions in Nepal's community forests",
abstract = "Nepal's forest legislation requires community forest user groups to prepare inventory based management plans. Several studies have observed positive changes in forest cover after the establishment of community forestry; however, the role of management plans in bringing about such change is less examined. Based on a case study of nine community forests in the mid-hills of Nepal, this paper discusses the role of plans in changing the forest conditions. The study assessed changes in forest conditions, observed forest management activities, conducted household surveys, and interviewed forest bureaucrats. Image analysis showed improvement in forest conditions after the introduction of inventory based planning; however, improvements cannot be attributed to the plans, as the prescriptions in these were not used in practice. Instead, it emerged that a culture emphasizing forest conservation, changes in demography and increased remittance incomes together with increasing bureaucratic requirements contributed to the improved forest conditions. The role of the plan remains contested since it largely serves as a basis for controlling communities and, hence, preparation of such plans appears as an empty ritual with little connection with actual forest management.",
keywords = "bureaucracy, conservation culture, forest cover, inventory, silvicultural operation",
author = "S. Baral and H. Meilby and Chhetri, {B. B. Khanal}",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1505/146554819825863799",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "37--50",
journal = "International Forestry Review",
issn = "1465-5489",
publisher = "Commonwealth Forestry Associaion",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The contested role of management plans in improving forest conditions in Nepal's community forests

AU - Baral, S.

AU - Meilby, H.

AU - Chhetri, B. B. Khanal

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Nepal's forest legislation requires community forest user groups to prepare inventory based management plans. Several studies have observed positive changes in forest cover after the establishment of community forestry; however, the role of management plans in bringing about such change is less examined. Based on a case study of nine community forests in the mid-hills of Nepal, this paper discusses the role of plans in changing the forest conditions. The study assessed changes in forest conditions, observed forest management activities, conducted household surveys, and interviewed forest bureaucrats. Image analysis showed improvement in forest conditions after the introduction of inventory based planning; however, improvements cannot be attributed to the plans, as the prescriptions in these were not used in practice. Instead, it emerged that a culture emphasizing forest conservation, changes in demography and increased remittance incomes together with increasing bureaucratic requirements contributed to the improved forest conditions. The role of the plan remains contested since it largely serves as a basis for controlling communities and, hence, preparation of such plans appears as an empty ritual with little connection with actual forest management.

AB - Nepal's forest legislation requires community forest user groups to prepare inventory based management plans. Several studies have observed positive changes in forest cover after the establishment of community forestry; however, the role of management plans in bringing about such change is less examined. Based on a case study of nine community forests in the mid-hills of Nepal, this paper discusses the role of plans in changing the forest conditions. The study assessed changes in forest conditions, observed forest management activities, conducted household surveys, and interviewed forest bureaucrats. Image analysis showed improvement in forest conditions after the introduction of inventory based planning; however, improvements cannot be attributed to the plans, as the prescriptions in these were not used in practice. Instead, it emerged that a culture emphasizing forest conservation, changes in demography and increased remittance incomes together with increasing bureaucratic requirements contributed to the improved forest conditions. The role of the plan remains contested since it largely serves as a basis for controlling communities and, hence, preparation of such plans appears as an empty ritual with little connection with actual forest management.

KW - bureaucracy

KW - conservation culture

KW - forest cover

KW - inventory

KW - silvicultural operation

U2 - 10.1505/146554819825863799

DO - 10.1505/146554819825863799

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85063088766

VL - 21

SP - 37

EP - 50

JO - International Forestry Review

JF - International Forestry Review

SN - 1465-5489

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 215572927