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IssuesconflictsLandLibrary Resource
There are 708 content items of different types and languages related to conflicts on the Land Portal.
Displaying 37 - 48 of 265

ข้อมูลพื้นฐาน - ชุมชนบ้านห้วยหินดำ

Reports & Research
December, 2013
Thailand

เอกสารที่รวบรวมข้อมูลพื้นฐานของชุมชนบ้านห้วยหินดำไว้อย่างครบถ้วน เหมาะสำหรับผู้ที่สนใจทั่วไป

Positive and Negative Aspects of Forestry Conflict: Lessons From Decentralized Forest Management in Indonesia

Reports & Research
February, 2009
Indonesia

Decentralization in natural resource management (NRM) is increasingly promoted as it is believed to offer better management. This study explores the positive and negative aspects of the forestry conflict that sometimes increases with decentralization. Drawing upon the results of a case study from Sumatra, this study examines how forestry conflict under decentralization processes was viewed by stakeholders. The conflict involved a logging company and a local community, and centered on a disputed forest boundary.

Ensuring Women’s Participation in Forest Decision-Making: Annual report 2015-2016

Institutional & promotional materials
December, 2015
South-Eastern Asia

Community forestry – as promoted by RECOFTC – provides an effective and cross-cutting solution that is aligned with the SDGs. This includes SDG goal 5 to achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls. RECOFTC has long understood that the long-term viability of community forest management is dependent on the inclusion of women. RECOFTC works to ensure that policies and programs of forestry stakeholders mainstream gender dimensions so that they are not at risk of creating or exacerbating inequalities, and ignoring women’s contribution to livelihoods.

Two Decades of Community Forestry in Nepal: What Have We Learned?

Reports & Research
October, 2011
Nepal

Development projects conceived now are rarely expected to have a life of more than five years, perhaps ten years at most. Looking back over more than twenty years of project experience in community forestry - itself grounded on an integrated development project of a similar time span - is thus a rare opportunity. The project has sought to promote social change in favor of the poor and disadvantaged, and it was recognized both by those involved in the project and by independent evaluators that this is not rapidly achieved

Giải quyết chồng lấn đất đai dựa trên sự tôn trọng truyền thống của cộng đồng: Cách tiếp cận cho một giải pháp bền vững

Reports & Research
December, 2015
Vietnam

Thiếu tôn trọng các tập quán canh tác truyền thống và vai trò của người dân trong quá trình quy hoạch sử dụng đất, giao đất giao rừng làm cho tình trạng chồng lấn, lấn chiếm đất lâm nghiệp xảy ra ở nhiều địa phương. Điều này gây ảnh hưởng đến công tác quản lý bảo vệ rừng bền vững.

REDD-Net Asia-Pacific Bulletin #1: Introducing Equity in REDD

Institutional & promotional materials
September, 2009
Nepal
Vietnam
South-Eastern Asia

This bulletin draws on country-level experience to share civil society perspectives on the challenges, opportunities, and possible approaches for pro-poor REDD. As governments begin to formulate their national REDD programs, questions are emerging about the role of local people in design and implementation, and the socio-economic implications for the rural poor. Drawing on experiences from Nepal and Vietnam, this bulletin includes:

Institutionalization of Conflict Capability in the Management of Natural Resources: Theoretical Perspectives and Empirical Experience in Indonesia

Reports & Research
September, 2007
Indonesia

This paper explores the conflicts between badly-affected local communities and logging and mining companies and analyzes how such conflicts can be addressed effectively.

Conflict Mediation in Asia's Increasingly Pressured Forests: A Tool for Getting the Positives out of Conflicts

Institutional & promotional materials
May, 2012
South-Eastern Asia

Conflict over forest resources is one of the major challenges in forest management. Researchers have observed that the number and severity of forest conflicts in Asia has increased over time, and that forest conflicts are now widespread across the region. In Cambodia in 2009, 236 community-outsider conflicts were recorded. In Indonesia, 359 incidents of forest-related community-outsider conflict were identified between 1997 and 2003, with numbers increasing over time. This high concentration of forest conflict makes Southeast Asia one of the ‘hotspots’ of forest conflict in the world.