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Partnerships in Sustainable Forest Resource Management: Learning from Latin America

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This book brings together experiences with a rich variety of sustainable forest and tree resource management partnerships in various countries in Latin America – Trinidad, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Gu...
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  • 14 November 2006
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This book brings together experiences with a rich variety of sustainable forest and tree resource management partnerships in various countries in Latin America – Trinidad, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Guyana, Brazil and Ecuador. The authors reflect on the scope, objectives, institutional organisation and benefits of partnerships, on the actors involved and excluded, and on the hindrances associated with overcoming cultural differences, institutional barriers, power imbalances and diverging interests. The question that runs as a common thread through this book is whether, and under what conditions, partnerships for sustainable forest and resource management can contribute to pro-poor, socially just and environmentally-friendly forest governance. By presenting the lessons learned from a wide range of partnerships, this book is a valuable resource for students, scholars and practitioners dealing with new governance forms in forest and natural resource management.
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Price: $98.00
Pages: 330
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: CEDLA Latin America Studies (CLAS)
Publication Date: 14 November 2006
ISBN: 9789004153394
Format: Paperback
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"This is the best work on recent policy debates over sustainable development, conservation, and livelihood in the forest I have read in years. It offers a lucid and unblinking exploration of 'partnership' as a means to reconcile seemly unbridgeable conflicts between states, business interests, forest dwellers, and biodiversity conservation in the interest of sustainable, equitable, and ecologically sound practices in forest land use." – Eduardo Silva, University of Missouri-St. Louis
"This is an excellent volume which brings a large range of new case study material from Latin America onto the international stage. It is a significant contribution to the growing debate on cross-sector partnerships in natural resource management and will be of interest to academics, policymakers and practitioners alike for the sensible, cautionary lessons yielded." – Anthony Hall, London School of Economics
Mirjam A.F. Ros-Tonen is a Human Geographer with a Ph.D. degree in policy sciences. She is affiliated to the Amsterdam institute for Metropolitan and International Development Studies (AMIDSt) of the Universiteit van Amsterdam as senior researcher and coordinator of the (Netherlands) Development Policy Review Network (DPRN). Recent publications include African Forests between Nature and Livelihood Resource(with Ton Dietz), published by The Edwin Mellen Press (2005), and ‘The Scope for Improving Rural Livelihoods through Non-Timber Forest Products: An Evolving Research Agenda' (with Freerk Wiersum), published in Forests, Trees and Livelihoods (2005). Mirjam Ros-Tonen is currently engaged in research into forest use and governance in the Brazilian Amazon.