Abstract

SUMMARY The history of forests regulation and institutional policy in Cameroon dates back to the erstwhile colonial period (1884–1961) when the German, British, and French administrations setup administrative and managerial entities to regulate the forest sector. The post-colonial administration continued with the colonial era regulations until 1981 when a new forest law was adopted. Cameroon's forest sector went through a reform process in 1994 with the enactment of a comprehensive forestry law linking the forest sector with a network of subsectors. This paper employs the case of Cameroon's forest policy reform process to respond to three logical research questions on the effects of sectoral and subsectoral forces on forest policy related issues: (1) what differentiates a critical subsector from a non-critical one? (2) does a stable sectoral network represent a successful takeover bid by a critical subsectoral one? (3) what are the conditions under which sectors can continue to affect subsectors? A struc...

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