REDD+ contribution to well-being and income is marginal: the perspective of local stakeholders
Membandingkan metode penilaian efektivitas inisiatif REDD+ subnasional
Revisiting the 'cornerstone of Amazonian conservation': a socioecological assessment of Brazil nut exploitation
Trees, soils, and warthogs - distribution of services and disservices from reforestation areas in southern Ethiopia
Conservation projects have often been criticised for creating global benefits while causing negative impacts on local livelihoods. Ecosystem services approaches have been seen as one way to change this by focussing explicitly on maintaining ecosystems for human well-being of stakeholders at various scales. However, ecosystem services approaches have often ignored trade-offs between groups of people and issues of power and do not automatically lead to better outcomes in terms of human well-being.
How do property rights reforms provide incentives for forest landscape restoration? Comparing evidence from Nepal, China and Ethiopia
From denuded to green mountains: process and motivating factors of forest landscape restoration in Phewa Lake watershed, Nepal
Exclosures as forest and landscape restoration tools lessons from Tigray Region, Ethiopia
Shared strengths and limitations of participatory forest management and area exclosure: two major state led landscape rehabilitation mechanisms in Ethiopia
From disabling to enabling: Evolution of community forest governance in Guatemala and Nicaragua. [Abstract]
El manejo de plantas silvestres alimenticias en escenarios de deforestación, ilustrado por una comunidad mestiza de la Amazonía Peruana
Las plantas silvestres alimenticias son un componente esencial de la dieta de la población rural en distintas partes del mundo, teniendo un rol importante en su seguridad alimentaria y diversidad nutricional. Dada la alarmante disminución de los bosques, la colecta de estas especies ocurre cada vez más en ecosistemas antropogénicos, donde las comunidades activamente las manejan para asegurar su disponibilidad y acceso.