Mutually beneficial company-community partnerships in plantation development: emerging lessons from Indonesia

Social conflicts with local people have caused some unsuccessful timber plantation developments in Indonesia. Company and community partnerships have provided opportunities for companies to accommodate local communities’ involvement and attempt to overcome these difficulties. Constraints in establishing mutually beneficial partnerships were studied, mainly to improve their long-term viability. The main components of a successful mutually beneficial partnership were defined as: commercial feasibility, equitable contractual agreements, the full understanding of both parties of the potential benefits and costs, and risks of joining the partnership, and a shared understanding of co-management and participatory approaches. The implementation of all three case studies suffered from: a lack of mechanisms to build trust; challenges to commercial viability due to inadequate management planning and consequently poor implementation; inadequate assessment of community needs and resulting waste of companies’ funds when developing income generating packages; no clear long-term reinvestment strategy; and poorly developed negotiation and renegotiation mechanisms.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nawir, A.A., Santoso, L.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2005
Subjects:plantations, forest plantations, partnerships, companies, communities, socioeconomics, assessment,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19323
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/1901
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-193232023-02-15T01:16:56Z Mutually beneficial company-community partnerships in plantation development: emerging lessons from Indonesia Nawir, A.A. Santoso, L. plantations forest plantations partnerships companies communities socioeconomics assessment Social conflicts with local people have caused some unsuccessful timber plantation developments in Indonesia. Company and community partnerships have provided opportunities for companies to accommodate local communities’ involvement and attempt to overcome these difficulties. Constraints in establishing mutually beneficial partnerships were studied, mainly to improve their long-term viability. The main components of a successful mutually beneficial partnership were defined as: commercial feasibility, equitable contractual agreements, the full understanding of both parties of the potential benefits and costs, and risks of joining the partnership, and a shared understanding of co-management and participatory approaches. The implementation of all three case studies suffered from: a lack of mechanisms to build trust; challenges to commercial viability due to inadequate management planning and consequently poor implementation; inadequate assessment of community needs and resulting waste of companies’ funds when developing income generating packages; no clear long-term reinvestment strategy; and poorly developed negotiation and renegotiation mechanisms. 2005 2012-06-04T09:09:20Z 2012-06-04T09:09:20Z Journal Article Nawir, A.A., Santoso, L. 2005. Mutually beneficial company-community partnerships in plantation development: emerging lessons from Indonesia . International Forestry Review 7 (3) :177-192. ISSN: 1465-5489. 1465-5489 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19323 https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/1901 en International Forestry Review
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic plantations
forest plantations
partnerships
companies
communities
socioeconomics
assessment
plantations
forest plantations
partnerships
companies
communities
socioeconomics
assessment
spellingShingle plantations
forest plantations
partnerships
companies
communities
socioeconomics
assessment
plantations
forest plantations
partnerships
companies
communities
socioeconomics
assessment
Nawir, A.A.
Santoso, L.
Mutually beneficial company-community partnerships in plantation development: emerging lessons from Indonesia
description Social conflicts with local people have caused some unsuccessful timber plantation developments in Indonesia. Company and community partnerships have provided opportunities for companies to accommodate local communities’ involvement and attempt to overcome these difficulties. Constraints in establishing mutually beneficial partnerships were studied, mainly to improve their long-term viability. The main components of a successful mutually beneficial partnership were defined as: commercial feasibility, equitable contractual agreements, the full understanding of both parties of the potential benefits and costs, and risks of joining the partnership, and a shared understanding of co-management and participatory approaches. The implementation of all three case studies suffered from: a lack of mechanisms to build trust; challenges to commercial viability due to inadequate management planning and consequently poor implementation; inadequate assessment of community needs and resulting waste of companies’ funds when developing income generating packages; no clear long-term reinvestment strategy; and poorly developed negotiation and renegotiation mechanisms.
format Journal Article
topic_facet plantations
forest plantations
partnerships
companies
communities
socioeconomics
assessment
author Nawir, A.A.
Santoso, L.
author_facet Nawir, A.A.
Santoso, L.
author_sort Nawir, A.A.
title Mutually beneficial company-community partnerships in plantation development: emerging lessons from Indonesia
title_short Mutually beneficial company-community partnerships in plantation development: emerging lessons from Indonesia
title_full Mutually beneficial company-community partnerships in plantation development: emerging lessons from Indonesia
title_fullStr Mutually beneficial company-community partnerships in plantation development: emerging lessons from Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Mutually beneficial company-community partnerships in plantation development: emerging lessons from Indonesia
title_sort mutually beneficial company-community partnerships in plantation development: emerging lessons from indonesia
publishDate 2005
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19323
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/1901
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