Community Forestry: Local Values, Conflict and Forest Governance
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 6/28/2012
EAN 9780521137584, ISBN10: 0521137586
Paperback, 192 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1 cm
Language: English
Providing a critical and incisive examination of community forestry, this is a detailed study of complex issues in local forest governance, community sustainability and grassroots environmentalism. It explores community forestry as an alternative form of local collaborative governance in globally significant developed forest regions, with examples ranging from the Gulf Islands of British Columbia to Scandinavia. Responding to the global trend in devolution of control over forest resources and the ever-increasing need for more sustainable approaches to forest governance, the book highlights both the possibilities and challenges associated with community forestry implementation. It features compelling case studies and accounts from those directly involved with community forestry efforts, providing unique insight into the underlying social processes, issues, events and perceptions. It will equip students, researchers and practitioners with a deep understanding of both the evolution and management of community forestry in a pan-national context.
Acknowledgements
1. Defining concepts and spaces for the re-emergence of community forestry
2. Putting community forestry into place
implementation and conflict
3. Keeping New England's forests common
4. Experiments and false starts
Ontario's community forestry experience
5. A 'watershed' case for community forestry in British Columbia's interior
the Creston Valley Forest Corporation
6. Contested forests and transition in two Gulf Island communities
7. The southwestern United States
community forestry as governance
8. Community access and the culture of stewardship in Finland and Sweden
9. Community forestry
a way forward
Index.