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Journal ArticleDOI

Land tenure and REDD+: The good, the bad and the ugly

TLDR
In this paper, a global comparative study on REDD+, led by the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFR), was conducted to investigate how tenure concerns are being addressed at both national and project level in emerging REDD+ programs.
Abstract
A number of international donors, national governments and project proponents have begun to lay the groundwork for REDD+, but tenure insecurity - including the potential risks of land grabbing by outsiders and loss of local user rights to forests and forest land - is one of the main reasons that many indigenous and other local peoples have publicly opposed it. Under what conditions is REDD+ a threat to local rights, and under what conditions does it present an opportunity? This article explores these issues based on available data from a global comparative study on REDD+, led by the Center for International Forestry Research, which is studying national policies and processes in 12 countries and 23 REDD+ projects in 6 countries. The article analyses how tenure concerns are being addressed at both national and project level in emerging REDD+ programs. The findings suggest that in most cases REDD+ has clearly provided some new opportunities for securing local tenure rights, but that piecemeal interventions by project proponents at the local level are insufficient in the absence of broader, national programs for land tenure reform. The potential for substantial changes in the status quo appear unlikely, though Brazil - the only one with such a national land tenure reform program - offers useful insights. Land tenure reform - the recognition of customary rights in particular - and a serious commitment to REDD+ both challenge the deep-rooted economic and political interests of ‘business as usual'.

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Opportunities for implementing REDD+ to enhance sustainable forest management and improve livelihoods in Lombok, NTB, Indonesia.

TL;DR: In this article, the potential role of localized forest management units (or KPH) as an institutional partner, using the West Rinjani Protected Forest Management Unit (KPHL RB) on the island of Lombok, Nusa Tenggara Barat province, Indonesia as a case study, was explored.
Journal ArticleDOI

Confusion vs. clarity: Property rights and forest use in Uganda

TL;DR: In this paper, the determinants of knowledge of formal rights and whether accurate knowledge of rights influences forest clearing and forest product harvesting behavior in Uganda were explored, and they found limited awareness of rules surrounding clearing forest, and mixed levels of awareness regarding rights to harvest specific forest products.
Journal ArticleDOI

Forests in a Changing Climate: A Sourcebook for Integrating REDD into Academic Programmes

TL;DR: The Forests in a Changing Climate (F4C) as mentioned in this paper is an overview of the key topics related to forests and climate change, under the overarching and evolving REDD narrative; with the purpose of facilitating the integration of this new knowledge domain into academic programs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nepal’s REDD+ Readiness Preparation and Multi-Stakeholder Consultation Challenges

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine Nepal's REDD+ policy deliberation process from a political ecology perspective, focusing on expressions of discursive power and representation within Nepal's ongoing multi-stakeholder REDD+, and highlight important challenges and an urgent need to improve design and practice of the consultation process.
Journal ArticleDOI

Saneamiento Territorial in Nicaragua, and the Prospects for Resolving Indigenous-Mestizo Land Conflicts

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a review of the prospects for saneamiento in resolving territorial conflicts in the Caribbean Coast of Nicaragua specifically, which is one of the first countries to implement it in its current form, and draw attention to its inherent contradictions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

New frontiers of land control: Introduction

TL;DR: Land questions have invigorated agrarian studies and economic history, with particular emphases on its control, since Marx as mentioned in this paper, since the early 1970s, and have been associated with various forms of accumulation, frontiers, enclosures, territories, grabs, and racialization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Territorialization and state power in Thailand

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the use of what they call internal territorialization in establishing control over natural resources and the people who use them and examine the emergence of territoriality in state power in Thailand.
Book

Rich Forests, Poor People: Resource Control and Resistance in Java

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a survey of the history of forest access control in Java, focusing on the following: 1. TRADITIONS OF FOREST CONTROL in JAVA 2. Gaining Access to People and Trees 3. State FORESTS and CHANGES in State 4. Organized Forest Violence, Reorganized Forest Access, 1942-1966 5. PEASANT POWER TO RESIST 6. A Forest without Trees 7. Teak and Temptation on the Extreme Periphery: Cultural Perspectives on Forest Crime
Book

Contested Frontiers in Amazonia

TL;DR: Based on 15 years of research in Brazil, an interdisciplinary documentation and analysis of the process of frontier change in one region of the Brazilian Amazon, the southern region of Brazil, is presented in this article, based on the idea that what they documented in the field - deforestation, settlement patterns, and the intensity of rural violence, for example -were the outcomes of the competition for resources among social groups capable of mobilizing varying degrees of power.

Who owns the world's forests? Forest tenure and public forests in transition.

A. White, +1 more
TL;DR: White et al. as mentioned in this paper presented an analysis of who owns and who should own the world's forests, highlighting trends in tenure and providing data for more informed decisions by policy makers, governments, companies, investors, local communities, research institutions and concerned NGOs.
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