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Tenure Rights and Beyond: Community Access to Forest Resources in Latin America

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2008
Nicaragua
Guatemala
Bolivie
Brésil

This occasional paper is the result of research carried out from 2006 to 2008 on the effects of new tenure rights for forest-based communities in Latin America on access to forest resources and benefits. Focused on seven different regions in four countries, the paper examines changes in statutory rights, the implementation of those rights in practice, and the extent to which they have led to tangible new benefits from forests, particularly to new sources of income.

The role of informal institutions in the use of forest resources in Latin America

Journal Articles & Books
Décembre, 2008
Bolivie
Brésil
Guatemala
Nicaragua

This study adopts an institutional approach to analyze the way in which informal rules, in their interaction with formal rules, shape the use of forest resources by diverse types of smallholders and communities (i.e., indigenous people, agro-extractive and traditional communities) in Latin America. Attention is given to understanding the ‘working rules’, comprising both formal and informal rules, that individuals use in making their decisions for land and forest resources access and use, which in turn affect benefits generation and distribution from such resources use.