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Decentralisation and forest management in Kapuas district, Central Kalimantan

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
December, 2001
Indonesia

This case study discusses decentralisation and forest management in Kapuas district, Central Kalimantan, focusing specifically on the impact of these administrative reforms on timber concessions operating there. It is based on field research carried out during June and July 2000.

Decentralisation of administration, policy making and forest management in Ketapang district, West Kalimantan

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
December, 2001
Indonesia

This study examines the preliminary impacts of Indonesia's decentralization process on the administration and management of forest resources in Ketapang District, West Kalimantan. The case study is based on field work carried out in mid-2000, using a rapid appraisal methodology.

Decentralisation of policies affecting forests and estate crops in Kutawaringin Timur district, Central Kalimantan

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
December, 2001
Indonesia

Kotawaringin Timur district lies within the Dayak heartland of Central Borneo, Indonesia. Prior to the late 1960s, most of the district was covered in dense tropical forest. However, these forests have been increasingly exploited since the 1970s when former-president Soeharto granted large timber concessions to logging companies in the area.

Decentralisation, local communities and forest management in Barito Selatan district, Central Kalimantan

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
December, 2001
Indonesia

Based on field research carried out in Central Kalimantan during June and July 2000, this chapter examines the likely impact of the decentralisation reforms on forest management in Barito Selatan. Conclusions are derived from three major sources.

Devolution in natural resource management: institutional arrangements and power shifts: a synthesis of case studies from southern Africa

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
December, 2001
Africa
Southern Africa

The study provides a comparative analysis of the devolution and empowerment process in 14 case studies drawn from eight countries in southern Africa.

Ecuador goes bananas: incremental technological change and forest loss

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
December, 2001
Ecuador

What policy lessons derive from the half-century of banana expansion in the coastal region? For that whole period bananas had a catalytic role in promoting coastal deforestation. At first, this was mostly through direct banana frontier expansion. Later the gradual settlement effects proved key.

Farming secondary forests in Indonesia

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
December, 2001
Indonesia

Estimates of the area of swidden fallow secondary forest in Indonesia are inaccurate, partly because swidden agricultural practices giving rise to the secondary forest are heterogeneous. Throughout Indonesia, swidden agriculture is evolving into more intensive land use.

Forest, resources and people in Bulungan: elements for a history of settlement, trade and social dynamics in Borneo, 1880-2000

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
December, 2001
Indonesia

Bulungan regency is the northern part of the province of East Kalimantan, Indonesia. In the course of the last decade, Kalimantan's or Borneo's hinterland has been the target of unprecedented non-timber forest products (NTFP) collecting activity. More intensive NTFP use has contributed to unsustainable extractive practices and environmental damage and to deep social and political disruption.

Formation and recovery of secondary forests in India: a particular reference to western Ghats in South India

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
December, 2001
India

This paper analyses the underlying causes of secondary forest formation and recovery in India, particularly the Western Ghats region of south India, from precolonial times to the present. In the pre colonial period, hunter gatherers, shifting cultivators and settled cultivators were the dominant users of forest land, with some limited timber felling by local chieftains and kings.

Income is not enough: the effect of economic incentives on forest product conservation: a comparison of forest communities dependent on the agroforests of Krui, Sumatra and natural dipterocarp forests of Kayan Mentarang, East Kalimantan

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
December, 2001
Indonesia

Data from damar agroforest and hill dipterocarp forest sites suggest that income alone is inadequate for explaining why people conserve a non-timber forest product. The explanatory value of several cash income-based indicators was tested and the results showed that these indicators provide only a partial explanation of people's conservation behaviour.

Introduction: the role of agricultural technologies in tropical deforestation

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
December, 2001

This introductory chapter sets the scene for the discussion in the edited volume on how new agricultural affects tropical forests. It critically reviews four hypotheses that have been central in the claim that better technologies help protect forests: the Borlaug, the subsistence, the economic development and the land degradation-deforestation hypotheses.