Decentralize in forest management policies
towards more people-oriented approaches has become major policy trends in many
of the world’s developing countries during the last decade. However, the power
of important actors to misuse the participatory forestry (PF) approach for
their self-interests has been stated as a main problem to success. So, this
study attempted to identify the most powerful actors and the extent at which
they influence the outcomes of PF, and also to measure the impact of PF on
livelihood assets of participants. The empirical data were collected from the
well-established PF programs at Madhupur Sal forests area of Bangladesh. The
results showed that the forest department (FD) proved itself as the most
powerful and influential actor in every element of power analysis in PF.
Regarding to livelihood analysis, the results revealed that the overall value
of participants’ livelihood assets was 0.85 and it was significantly differed
from the non-participants value of 0.66. However, the development of human,
physical and financial assets was not indicating a decent improvement like as
natural and social assets of participants. So, it is necessary to pay more
attention to boost up participants’ human and financial assets through
intensive training and adopting proper tree-crop production techniques, and
also ensuring alternative livelihoods approaches to the local people. In
addition, the local government will need to pay more emphasis on constructing
village roads and infrastructure so as to enhance physical assets of the local
people. Finally, the study would recommend promoting PF with apposite government
facilities and also empowering local participants in order to balance the power
among different actors, and this will facilitate the participants in governing
all of their development activities efficiently.
References
[1]
Agarwal, A., & Gupta, K. (2005). Decentralization and Participation: The Governance of Common-Pool Resources in Nepal’s Terai. World Development, 337, 1101-1114. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2005.04.009
[2]
Barrow, E., Clarke, J., Grundy, I., Jones, K. R., & Tessema, Y. (2002). Analysis of Stakeholder Based Natural Resource Management: Creating Space for Local People to Participate and Benefit? Natural Resource Perspectives (p. 320). Berkeley: University of California Press.
[3]
BBS (2006). Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS), Dhaka, Bangladesh. http://www.bbs.gov.bd/Home.aspx
[4]
Bond, A., Davis, C. N., Nott, K., & Stuart, G. (2006). Community Based Natural Resource Manual. WWF-World Wide Fund, 24-52.
[5]
Brown, F. P. (2009). Participatory Forest Management (PFM) Discourse in South Africa: Ecological Moderation in the Developing World. Ph.D. Thesis, Durban: University of Kwa Zulu-Natal.
[6]
Carney, D. (1998). Sustainable Rural Livelihoods; What Contribution Can We Make? London: Department for International Development.
[7]
Chen, H., Zhu, T., Krott, M., Calvo, J. F., Ganesh, S. P., & Makoto, I. (2013). Measurement and Evaluation of Livelihood Assets in Sustainable Forest Commons Governance. Land Use Policy, 30, 908-914.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.landusepol.2012.06.009
[8]
Devkota, M. (2010). Interests and Power as Drivers of Community Forestry: A Case Study of Nepal. Ph.D. Thesis, Germany: University of Gottingen.
[9]
FD (Forest Department) (2014). Land and Forest Area. Official Website of Bangladesh Forest Department, Government of Forest. http://www.bforest.gov.bd/act.php
[10]
Fometer, T., & Vermaak, J. (2001). Community Forestry and Poverty. Rural Development Forestry Network. Network Paper, Vol. 25h. Overseas Development Institute, UK, 1-8.
[11]
Hussein, K., & Nelson, J. (1998). Sustainable Livelihood and Livelihood Diversification. IDS Working Paper, No. 69. Brighton: Institute of Development Studies.
[12]
Islam, K. K., & Sato, N. (2012a). Participatory Forestry in Bangladesh: Has It Helped to Increase the Livelihoods of Sal Forests Dependent People. Southern Forest: A Journal of Forest Science, 74, 89-101.
[13]
Islam, K. K., & Sato, N. (2012b). Deforestation, Land Conversion and Illegal Logging in Bangladesh: The Case of the Sal Forests. iForest: Biogeosciences and Forestry, 5, 171-178. http://dx.doi.org/10.3832/ifor0578-005
[14]
Islam, K. K., Hoogastra, M., Ullah, M. O., & Sato, N. (2012). Economic Contribution of Participatory Agroforestry Program to Poverty Alleviation: A Case from Sal Forests, Bangladesh. Journal of Forestry Research, 23, 323-332.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11676-012-0260-6
[15]
Islam, K. K., Rahman, G. M., Fujiwara, T., & Sato, N. (2013). People’s Participation in Forest Conservation and Livelihoods Improvements: Experience from a Forestry Project in Bangladesh. International Journal of Biodiversity Science, Ecosystem Services & Management, 9, 30-43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21513732.2012.748692
[16]
Islam, K. K., Ullah, M. O., Hoogstra, M., & Sato, N. (2012). Economic Contribution of Participatory Agroforestry Program to Poverty Alleviation: A Case from Sal forests, Bangladesh. Journal of Forestry Research, 23, 323-332.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11676-012-0260-6
[17]
Itubo, A. F. (2011). Power Dynamics within Community Forestry: Examples from Kenya. MSc Thesis, Germany: University of Gottingen.
[18]
Krott, M. (2005). Forest Policy Analysis. Dordrecht: Springer.
[19]
Krott, M., Bader, A., Schusser, C., Devkota, R., & Maryudi, A. (2013). Actor-Centered Power: The Driving Force in Decentralized Community Based Forest Governance. Forest Policy and Economics, in press.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.forpol.2013.04.012
[20]
Larson, A. M., & Ribot, J. C. (2007). The Poverty of Forest Policy: Double Standards on an Uneven Playing Field. Sustainability Science, 2, 189-204. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11625-007-0030-0
[21]
Malla, Y. B. (2000). Impact of Community Forestry Policy on Rural Livelihoods and Food Security in Nepal.
http://www.fao.org/docrep/x7273e/x7273e07.htm
[22]
Maryudi, A. (2011). The Contesting Aspiration in the Forests: Actors, Interests and Power in Community Forestry in Java, Indonesia. Ph.D. Thesis, Germany: University of Gottin-gen.
[23]
Muhammed, N., Koike, M., Haque, F., & Miah, M. D. (2008). Quantitative Assessment of People Oriented Forestry in Bangladesh: A Case Study from Tangail Forest Division. Journal of Environmental Management, 88, 83-92.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2007.01.029
[24]
Peluso, N. L., Tumer, M., & Fortman, L. (1994). Introducing Community Forestry: Annotated Listing of Tropics and Readings. Rome, FAO. http://www.fao.org/docrep/t3500e/t3500e00.htm
[25]
Ribot, J. C. (2004). Waiting for Democracy: The Politics of Choice in Natural Resource Decentralization. Washington DC: World Resource Institute.
[26]
Safa, M. S. (2004). The Effect of Participatory Forest Management on the Livelihood of the Settlers in a Rehabilitation Program of Degraded Forest in Bangladesh. Small-Scale Forest Economics, Management and Policy, 3, 223-238.
[27]
Shackleton, S., Campbell, B., Wollenberg, E., & Edmunds, D. (2002). Devolution and Community Based Natural Resource Management: Creating Space for Local People to Participate and Benefit? Natural Resource Perspective, 76, 1-6.
[28]
Shahbaz, B. (2009). Dilemmas in Participatory Forest Management in Northwest Pakistan: A Livelihoods Perspective. Human Geography Series.
[29]
Sobel, J. (2002). Can We Trust Social Capital? Journal of Economic Literature, 40, 139-154.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1257/jel.40.1.139
[30]
Webber, M. (1964). Basic Concept of Sociology. New York.