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Rapport - Conférence internationale sur la contribution des critères et indicateurs pour la gestion forestière durable: perspectives futures (CICI - 2003) - Volume 1

Journal Articles & Books
November, 2003
Burkina Faso
Honduras
United States of America
Guatemala
Zimbabwe
Australia
Bolivia
Austria
Malawi
Finland
Uruguay
New Zealand
Kenya
Turkey
Argentina
India
United Kingdom
Gabon
Brazil
Americas

La Conférence internationale sur la contribution des critères et indicateurs de la gestion forestière durable: Perspectives d'avenir (CICI - 2003) a été accueillie par les Services forestiers nationaux du Guatemala (Instituto Nacional de Bosques, INAB) à Guatemala City du 3 au 7 février 2003, avec le concours de l'Organisation des Nations Unies pour l'alimentation et l'agriculture (FAO), l'Organisation internationale des bois tropicaux (OIBT) et les gouvernements de Finlande et des Etats-Unis.

Second international workshop on participatory forestry in Africa

Journal Articles & Books
November, 2003
United States of America
Gambia
Mali
Ethiopia
Congo
Malawi
Niger
Cameroon
Mozambique
Morocco
Japan
Uganda
Italy
Tanzania
Senegal
Chad
Africa

The First International Workshop on Community Forestry in Africa was held in the Gambia in February 1999. It began the process of bringing together all of the African experiences in community-based natural resource management. Until the Gambia workshop, those looking for documentation of existing initiatives would have looked towards Asia for information about best practices and experience in participatory forest management.

Water as a Vehicle for Inter-state Cooperation: A Legal Perspective

Journal Articles & Books
July, 2003
Nigeria
United States of America
Nepal
China
Pakistan
Eswatini
United Kingdom
Canada
Myanmar
Niger
Thailand
Mozambique
Laos
South Africa
Vietnam
Italy
Cambodia
India
Mexico
Netherlands

In the first part of this paper the role of the core principles in three different scenarios will be discussed. The first is a setting where a shared watercourse, but no specific treaty exists; the second, where a treaty is in the process of being negotiated; and the third where an agreement over the shared resource is in force. The second par t of the paper will look in detail at the normative content of each principle, its reflection in specific watercourse agreements and its implementation by joint bodies.

General Regulations made in terms of the Communal Land Reform Act.

Regulations
February, 2003
Namibia

These Regulations, made in terms of section 45 of the Communal Land Reform Act, provide with respect to a wide variety of matters concerning communal land and communal land rights. Part I deals with (application for) customary land rights. It specifies the maximum size of land that may be held under customary land right and specifies particulars pertaining to allocation of customary land right.

Towards a Common Platform on Access to Land

Reports & Research
January, 2003
Global

Towards a Common Platform on Access to Land has evolved through an extensive process of global consultation that was launched in 2000 at the eighth session of the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development. It aims to stimulate and support public policies and country-level activities that improve access by the poor to land and productive requirements in order to improve their production and household incomes. Its global scope means that it can gather and disseminate knowledge and lessons learned from and to different countries and regions.

Traditional institutions, multiple stakeholders and modern perspectives in common property.

Reports & Research
December, 2002

Forests and pastoralism are in a state of crisis in the Borana lowlands in southern Ethiopia. State management has failed to control forest exploitation and past and present development interventions continue to undermine pastoral production systems. In this paper the authors aim to show how a fundamental misunderstanding of pastoral land management, and in particular pastoral tenure systems, has undermined traditional institutions and the environment for which they were once responsible.

Impacts of programs and organizations on the adoption of sustainable land management technologies in Uganda

Reports & Research
December, 2002
Uganda
Eastern Africa

The government of Uganda is currently decentralizing many of its services including those directly related to agriculture and the environment. Non-government organizations (NGOs) and community-based organizations (CBOs) are being asked to take the lead in the provision of government services such as agricultural extension during the transition to demand driven fee-for-service. This paper explores the role of government programs, NGOs and CBOs in the adoption of land management technologies.

Reducing conflict and improving resource management for Kenyan pastoralists

December, 2002

Governments and scientists have long regarded the pastoralists’ way of life as a cause of environmental degradation. This belief is rooted in a misunderstanding of the pastoralist way of life and is reflected in national policies on land tenure and resource access in Kenya. The area of land controlled by pastoralists has been steadily reduced, and pastoralists have been encouraged to give up their nomadic way of life and settle, leading to conflict between pastoralist groups and other land users and damage to the environment.

Community based natural resources management in Mozambique: a theoretical or practical strategy for local sustainable development?: the case study of Derre Forest Reserve

December, 2002
Mozambique
Sub-Saharan Africa

What does community based natural resource management (CBNRM) mean for Mozambique's poor?Through the case study of Derre Forest Reserve in Zambezia province, this paper explores the theory and practice of CBNRM, an approach which has been widely promoted in southern Africa, and is central to elements of the Mozambican forestry and wildlife policy of 1999.The paper examines the history of community involvement in forest use in the reserve, and the changing nature of local organisations.

Balancing agricultural development and deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon

Policy Papers & Briefs
December, 2002
South America
Brazil

This report identifies the links among economic growth, poverty alleviation, and natural resource degradation in Brazil. It examines the effects of (1) a major devaluation of the Brazilian real (R$); (2) improvements of infrastructure in the Amazon to link it with the rest of Brazil and bordering countries; (3) modification of land tenure regimes in the Amazon agricultural frontier; (4) adoption of technological change in agriculture both inside and outside the Amazon; and (5) fiscal mechanisms to reduce deforestation." -- from Author's Abstract