Abstract

Rapid growth of environmental problems, economic volatilities, and social changes have increased the scopes of adopting environmentally friendly and resilient production systems. Regenerative farming and forestry practices are such systems appropriate for mountain communities in Nepal. They had performed better with indigenous resources, institutions, and social-ecological systems. Unfortunately, the assets have been degraded to extinction, mainly commencing works of national and international development agencies. Consequently, regenerative practices are disappearing. Despite appeals and commitments, the degradations of the assets are not halted and reversed. This study used secondary sources of data and work experiences and explained the working faults of the external agencies involved in the agriculture, forestry, and wildlife sectors. It elucidated that most regenerative practices had sustained well in forest and farm resource-integrated production systems and a modest degree of natural and human inputs and production environments. The production environments degraded when the government agencies provided foreign agencies opportunities to be involved actively in policy formulation and implementation of agriculture and forestry-related sectors. The foreign agencies meddled in the national policies and community practices and modified the production environments for their interests and benefits. They intervened in policies and local communities to practice a farming system based on extremely human-made and imported inputs and institutions and to manage forest-related resources in extremely intact natural systems. In the policy discourses and decisions, the farming inputs, practices, and institutions popularly practiced in developed countries are considered superior whereas the indigenous ones are considered inferior. Agricultural plans and policies have overvalued flash yield or other direct returned and undervalued environmental friendliness, indirect economic benefits, and social advantages to prioritize support of the government and other agencies. The introduced farming inputs and institutions displaced or hampered the indigenous ones. The foreign agencies also meddled in forest policies and practices of the country to address environmental and economic problems of developed countries which resulted in adverse impacts on the indigenous assets. They intervened in the resource management policies with financial and technical inputs to destroy some of the assets and make the forest-related resource management that results in better benefits (offsetting GHG emission, enhancing tranquility and serenity of recreational sites, and potentially expanding agricultural markets) to the people of developed countries. This study has explained how the officials and experts of both government and foreign agencies abused and misused some strategic tactics and overused, poorly used and disused, others in their work process to address their self-centered interests and problems. In essence, intentional destructive interventions of the policy and development agencies have resulted in degradation to the extinction of the indigenous assets in the communities.

Highlights

  • Occurring rapid changes in social, political, economic, and environmental systems have increased some critical risks and uncertainties for food security and social wellbeing for vulnerable communities [1,2]

  • Considering the study’s scope, this study aimed to critically assess work faults of the external agencies and answered the following crucial policy questions: What are critical problems in work activities or processes of the external agencies that resulted in the loss of the indigenous assets of agriculture and forestry-related sectors? What are the primary factors driving the agencies to work against the indigenous assets? A detailed literature review provides a theoretical foundation to determine relevant testable hypotheses for answering the above questions

  • Many theoretical and policy implications can be drawn from this study about the loss of indigenous resources, social-ecological systems, and institutions that had sustained regenerative agricultural and forestry practices

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Summary

Introduction

Occurring rapid changes in social, political, economic, and environmental systems have increased some critical risks and uncertainties for food security and social wellbeing for vulnerable communities [1,2]. The inheritance of resource limitations, time requirements, and socio-political inertia constrain for instantly delivering solutions to such problems [3] These gloomy situations have urged the world to compromise modern risky activities with even high returns and practice some resilience measures with even moderate returns. Resilience is considered the capability of an ecological system, social system, individual, community, or nation to tolerate or sustain and cope with recurring adverse conditions It accounts for the capability of adapting, reviving, and transforming into satisfactorily functioning conditions in a timely and efficient manner after exposure to one or multiple adverse conditions [4]. Promoting such vital measures requires in-depth studies on barriers to practice such locally feasible measures

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