Participatory forest management and its impacts on livelihoods and forest status: the case of Bonga forest in Ethiopia

The forest resources in Ethiopia have suffered decades of mismanagement due mainly to loosely defined property relations over these resources. As one of the solutions, Participatory Forest Management (PFM) scheme was introduced during the early 1990s by some NGOs. Nearly two decades of experience now exists in the country. However systematic assessments of the performance of the scheme are scanty. This study reports the experience from Bonga PFM project, which is one of the oldest pilot sites. Forest inventory and socio-economic survey were conducted to collect data. The study was conducted during a transition from NGO - Community to State - Community based management of the PFM project. PFM is shown to have positive impacts both on the state of the forest and living condition of participant households at least within the project life time. Forest conditions such as seedling and sapling densities improved. PFM also (i) promoted awareness about forest, (ii) capacitated locals to form new institutional arrangement that increased their participation in forest management, helped to reduce open access and assisted a regulated forest use, and (iii) contributed towards social equity in terms of gender and minority ethnic groups. When accompanied with complementary non-forest based livelihood activities, PFM helped to diversify income sources, increase household income level, and build household assets. This reduced dependence of communities on forests for livelihoods. A challenge threatening the sustainability of the PFM program in Ethiopia is the weak government support for the scheme. PFM is still far from being mainstreamed in the forest management system of the country. Thus, it will be appropriate to assess how the PFM programs would perform few years after the support of the NGOs terminates.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gobeze, T., Bekele, M., Lemenih, H., Kassa, H.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:community involvement, participation, income, livelihoods, non-governmental organizations, regeneration, gender,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20235
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/2854
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-202352023-02-15T13:23:50Z Participatory forest management and its impacts on livelihoods and forest status: the case of Bonga forest in Ethiopia Gobeze, T. Bekele, M. Lemenih, H. Kassa, H. community involvement participation income livelihoods non-governmental organizations regeneration gender The forest resources in Ethiopia have suffered decades of mismanagement due mainly to loosely defined property relations over these resources. As one of the solutions, Participatory Forest Management (PFM) scheme was introduced during the early 1990s by some NGOs. Nearly two decades of experience now exists in the country. However systematic assessments of the performance of the scheme are scanty. This study reports the experience from Bonga PFM project, which is one of the oldest pilot sites. Forest inventory and socio-economic survey were conducted to collect data. The study was conducted during a transition from NGO - Community to State - Community based management of the PFM project. PFM is shown to have positive impacts both on the state of the forest and living condition of participant households at least within the project life time. Forest conditions such as seedling and sapling densities improved. PFM also (i) promoted awareness about forest, (ii) capacitated locals to form new institutional arrangement that increased their participation in forest management, helped to reduce open access and assisted a regulated forest use, and (iii) contributed towards social equity in terms of gender and minority ethnic groups. When accompanied with complementary non-forest based livelihood activities, PFM helped to diversify income sources, increase household income level, and build household assets. This reduced dependence of communities on forests for livelihoods. A challenge threatening the sustainability of the PFM program in Ethiopia is the weak government support for the scheme. PFM is still far from being mainstreamed in the forest management system of the country. Thus, it will be appropriate to assess how the PFM programs would perform few years after the support of the NGOs terminates. 2009 2012-06-04T09:13:11Z 2012-06-04T09:13:11Z Journal Article Gobeze, T., Bekele, M., Lemenih, H., Kassa, H. 2009. Participatory forest management and its impacts on livelihoods and forest status: the case of Bonga forest in Ethiopia . International Forestry Review 11 (3) :346-358. ISSN: 1465-5489. 1465-5489 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20235 https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/2854 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 community involvement
participation
income
livelihoods
non-governmental organizations
regeneration
gender
community involvement
participation
income
livelihoods
non-governmental organizations
regeneration
gender
spellingShingle community involvement
participation
income
livelihoods
non-governmental organizations
regeneration
gender
community involvement
participation
income
livelihoods
non-governmental organizations
regeneration
gender
Gobeze, T.
Bekele, M.
Lemenih, H.
Kassa, H.
Participatory forest management and its impacts on livelihoods and forest status: the case of Bonga forest in Ethiopia
description The forest resources in Ethiopia have suffered decades of mismanagement due mainly to loosely defined property relations over these resources. As one of the solutions, Participatory Forest Management (PFM) scheme was introduced during the early 1990s by some NGOs. Nearly two decades of experience now exists in the country. However systematic assessments of the performance of the scheme are scanty. This study reports the experience from Bonga PFM project, which is one of the oldest pilot sites. Forest inventory and socio-economic survey were conducted to collect data. The study was conducted during a transition from NGO - Community to State - Community based management of the PFM project. PFM is shown to have positive impacts both on the state of the forest and living condition of participant households at least within the project life time. Forest conditions such as seedling and sapling densities improved. PFM also (i) promoted awareness about forest, (ii) capacitated locals to form new institutional arrangement that increased their participation in forest management, helped to reduce open access and assisted a regulated forest use, and (iii) contributed towards social equity in terms of gender and minority ethnic groups. When accompanied with complementary non-forest based livelihood activities, PFM helped to diversify income sources, increase household income level, and build household assets. This reduced dependence of communities on forests for livelihoods. A challenge threatening the sustainability of the PFM program in Ethiopia is the weak government support for the scheme. PFM is still far from being mainstreamed in the forest management system of the country. Thus, it will be appropriate to assess how the PFM programs would perform few years after the support of the NGOs terminates.
format Journal Article
topic_facet community involvement
participation
income
livelihoods
non-governmental organizations
regeneration
gender
author Gobeze, T.
Bekele, M.
Lemenih, H.
Kassa, H.
author_facet Gobeze, T.
Bekele, M.
Lemenih, H.
Kassa, H.
author_sort Gobeze, T.
title Participatory forest management and its impacts on livelihoods and forest status: the case of Bonga forest in Ethiopia
title_short Participatory forest management and its impacts on livelihoods and forest status: the case of Bonga forest in Ethiopia
title_full Participatory forest management and its impacts on livelihoods and forest status: the case of Bonga forest in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Participatory forest management and its impacts on livelihoods and forest status: the case of Bonga forest in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Participatory forest management and its impacts on livelihoods and forest status: the case of Bonga forest in Ethiopia
title_sort participatory forest management and its impacts on livelihoods and forest status: the case of bonga forest in ethiopia
publishDate 2009
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20235
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/2854
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AT lemenihh participatoryforestmanagementanditsimpactsonlivelihoodsandforeststatusthecaseofbongaforestinethiopia
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