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The wealth of the dry forests: can sound forest management contribute to the millennium development goals in Sub-Saharan Africa?

Policy Papers & Briefs
Diciembre, 2006

Dry forests in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) cover approximately 43% of the continent. They are inhabited by nearly 236 million people, many of these the poorest in the world. A majority of the population of these regions is dependent on traditional energy sources (i.e., firewood, charcoal and organic wastes), subsistence farming, generally free-ranging livestock, and products harvested from the dry forests. Growing pressure on dry forest resources to meet human and socioeconomic development needs mean that dry forests are increasingly being utilised unsustainably.

Where are the poor and where are the trees?: targeting of poverty reduction and forest conservation in Vietnam

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2006
Viet Nam

This paper highlights the spatial linkages of forest quality with poverty incidence and poverty density in Vietnam. Most of the Vietnamese poor live in densely populated river deltas and cities while remote upland areas have the highest poverty incidences, gaps, and severities. Forests of high local and global value are located in areas where relatively few poor people live, but where the incidence, gap, and severity of poverty are strongest, and where the livelihood strategies are based on agricultural and forest activities.

Where are the poor and where are the trees?: targeting of poverty reduction and forest conservation in Vietnam (Vietnamese)

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2006
Viet Nam

This paper highlights the spatial linkages of forest quality with poverty incidence and poverty density in Vietnam. Most of the Vietnamese poor live in densely populated river deltas and cities while remote upland areas have the highest poverty incidences, gaps, and severities. Forests of high local and global value are located in areas where relatively few poor people live, but where the incidence, gap, and severity of poverty are strongest, and where the livelihood strategies are based on agricultural and forest activities.

Understanding forest tenure: What rights and for whom?

Journal Articles & Books
Noviembre, 2006
Estados Unidos de América
China
Indonesia
Reino Unido
Pakistán
Tailandia
Nepal
República de Corea
Filipinas
Malasia
Japón
Myanmar
Brunei Darussalam
Países Bajos
India
Bhután
Viet Nam
Camboya

The study conducted by FAO and partners in South and Southeast Asia was based on an analysis of forest tenure according to two variables: the type of ownership, and the level of control of and access to resources. It aimed to take into account the complex combination of forest ownership − whether legally or customarily defined − and arrangements for the management and use of forest resources. Forest tenure determines who can use what resources, for how long and under what conditions.

Making rights a reality

Journal Articles & Books
Noviembre, 2006
Nepal
Laos
Mozambique
Zambia
Kirguistán
Guatemala
Países Bajos
India
Etiopía
Nueva Zelandia
Mongolia
Brasil
Camboya
África

This paper represents part of an area of work which analyses access to natural resources in Mozambique. An initial paper examined the extent to which Mozambique’s recent regulatory changes to natural resource access and management have had their intended effects (LSP Working Paper 17: Norfolk, S. (2004). “Examining access to natural resources and linkages to sustainable livelihoods: a case study of Mozambique”). This paper is complemented by LSP Working Paper 28: Tanner et al. (2006).