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Research, part of a Special Feature on Do we need new management paradigms to achieve sustainability in tropical forests? Domestic Forests: A New Paradigm for Integrating Local Communities' Forestry into Tropical Forest Science

TLDR
In this paper, a synthesis derived from various long-term research programs carried out by the authors in Southeast Asia and Africa on forests managed by farmers is presented, which argues for the integration into forest science of a new concept of land management in which production and conservation are compatible, and in which there is no choice to be made between people and nature.
Abstract
Despite a long history of confrontation between forest agencies and forest people, "indigenous" or "local" practices are increasingly considered as a viable alternative of forest management. This paper is a synthesis derived from various long-term research programs carried out by the authors in Southeast Asia and Africa on forests managed by farmers. These researches looked at local practices and underlying science, including their social, political, and symbolic dimensions. They also addressed evolutionary trends and driving forces, as well as potential and limits for forest conservation and development, mitigation of deforestation, biodiversity conservation, and poverty alleviation in a context of global environmental, political, and social change. We discuss how forest management by local communities, contrary to the unified models of professional forest management, exhibits a high historical and geographical diversity. The analysis we draw from the various examples we studied reveals several invariants, which allows proposing the unifying paradigm of "domestic forest." The first universal feature concerns the local managers themselves, who are, in their vast majority, farmers. Management practices range from local interventions in the forest ecosystem, to more intensive types of forest culture, and ultimately to permanent forest plantation. But in all cases, forest management is closely integrated with agriculture. The second universal feature concerns the conceptual continuity of planted forests with the natural forest, in matters of vegetation's structure and composition as well as economic traits and ecosystem services. The resulting forest is uneven-aged, composed of several strata, harboring a large diversity of species, and producing a wide range of products, with timber seldom being the dominant one. The term "domestic forest" aims at highlighting the close relationship the domestication process establishes between a specific human group, including its elementary units, the "domestic units," and the forest, transformed and managed to fulfill the needs of that group. The domestic forest paradigm calls for the integration into forest science of a new concept of land management in which production and conservation are compatible, and in which there is no choice to be made between people and nature. It does not aim at contesting the value of conventional forest science, but it proposes domestic forests as a new scientific domain, for the combined benefit of forest science and of forest people. It does not contest the value of conventional forest management models, but pushes towards more equitable relations between forest agencies and farmers managing forest resources on their own lands.

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Land use transitions: Socio-ecological feedback versus socio-economic change

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore whether the sources of land use transitions are mostly endogenous socio-ecological forces or exogenous socio-economic factors, and evaluate the varying ecological quality of expanding forests associated with these pathways.
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Pervasive human-driven decline of life on Earth points to the need for transformative change

Sandra Díaz, +37 more
- 13 Dec 2019 - 
TL;DR: The first integrated global-scale intergovernmental assessment of the status, trends, and future of the links between people and nature provides an unprecedented picture of the extent of the authors' mutual dependence, the breadth and depth of the ongoing and impending crisis, and the interconnectedness among sectors and regions.
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Community managed forests and forest protected areas: An assessment of their conservation effectiveness across the tropics

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of protected and community managed forests for the long term maintenance of forest cover in the tropics was assessed through a meta-analysis of published case-studies, which compared land use/cover change data for these two broad types of forest management and assess their performance in maintaining forest cover.
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Global Forest Transition: Prospects for an End to Deforestation

TL;DR: In this article, a review synthesizes existing knowledge on the occurrence, causes, and ecological impacts of forest transitions and examines the prospects and policy options for a global forest transition, concluding that the ecological quality of forest transition depends on multiple factors, including the importance of natural forest regeneration versus plantations.
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Facing up to the paradigm of ecological intensification in agronomy: Revisiting methods, concepts and knowledge

TL;DR: Five additional avenues that agronomic research could follow to strengthen the ecological intensification of current farming systems are proposed, assuming that progress in plant sciences over the last two decades provides new insight of potential use to agronomists.
References
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Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed

TL;DR: Scott as discussed by the authors describes how certain schemes to improve the human condition have failed and why these schemes have failed, including the one described in this paper, See Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998.
Book

People and forests : communities, institutions, and governance

TL;DR: Agrawal et al. as discussed by the authors explored the complex interactions between local communities and their forests, focusing on the rules by which communities govern and manage their forest resources, and examined why some people use their forests sustainably while others do not.
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Indigenous management of tropical forest ecosystems: the case of the Kayapó indians of the Brazilian Amazon

TL;DR: The Kayapo Indians of Brazil's Amazon Basin are described as effective managers of tropical forest, utilizing an extensive inventory of useful native plants that are concentrated by human activity in special forest areas (resource islands, forest fields, forest openings, tuber gardens, agricultural plots, old fields, and trailsides).