Focal point
Location
The Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) is a non-profit, scientific facility that conducts research on the most pressing challenges of forest and landscapes management around the world. With our global, multidisciplinary approach, we aim to improve human well-being, protect the environment, and increase equity. To do so, we help policymakers, practitioners and communities make decisions based on solid science about how they use and manage their forests and landscapes.
Capacity building, collaboration and partnerships are essential to finding and implementing innovative solutions to the challenges that the globe faces. We are proud to work with local and international partners. We are a member of the CGIAR Consortium and lead the CGIAR Research Program on Forests, Trees and Agroforestry.
Our headquarters are in Bogor, Indonesia. We have offices in 8 countries across Asia, Latin America and Africa, and we work in more than 30 countries. Contact us for more information.
Resources
Displaying 381 - 385 of 808Is REDD+ an idea whose time has come, or gone?
Previous international and national policies have, for various reasons, failed to prevent deforestation in developing countries. REDD+ incorporates some of these past policies, but also some innovations. Lessons from past experience will need to be taken on board and new alliances will need to be forged if REDD+ is to be successful.
Introduction: Theory and practice of adaptive collaborative management
Integrating participatory mapping and GIS to build local information systems
Institutional dynamics and climate change in the Congo Basin Forest of Cameroon, West Africa
Incentives +: how can REDD improve well-being in forest communities?
REDD initiatives are more likely to succeed if they build on the interests of forest communities and indigenous people. More attention is needed to the balance of incentives, benefits, rights and political participation across levels of decision making, interest groups and administration. Incentives can include payments or other benefits for good practices, developing alternative livelihoods, formalising land tenure and local resource rights and intensifying productivity on nonforest lands.