Abstract

Several countries worldwide have committed to forest and landscape restoration (FLR) through ambitious pledges in numbers of hectares to be restored. As the implementation of these commitments happens within countries, different actors from global to local scales must negotiate the “what, where and how” of specific forest restoration projects. We interviewed actors at national, state and local scales to gather their narratives regarding barriers and strategies for upscaling forest restoration and compared the narratives among them and with those that prevail in the global literature on FLR. We based the local scale in four Atlantic Forest landscapes. We classified the narratives gathered according to three discourses commonly used in environmental policy arenas: (1) ecological modernization, advocating market solutions; (2) green governmentality, with its emphasis on technocratic solutions; and (3) civic environmentalism promoting governance. Brazilian legislation with its mandate of forest restoration in private lands appeared as the main restoration driver in the interviews. However, when political will for enforcement weakens, other strategies are needed. An ecological modernization narrative, around increasing funding, incentives, market and investments, prevailed in the narratives on barriers and strategies for all actors from the global to the local scales. Similarities nevertheless diminished from the global to the local scale. The narratives of national actors resembled those found in the global literature, which emphasize strategies based on increased capacity building, within a green governmentality narrative, and governance arrangements, a civic environmentalist narrative. These narratives appeared less at state scales, and were almost absent at local scales where forest restoration was perceived mostly as a costly legal mandate. Similar narratives across all actors and scales indicate that a focus on improving the economics of restoration can aid in upscaling forest restoration in Brazilian Atlantic Forest landscapes. However, discrepant narratives also show that inclusive governance spaces where the negotiation of FLR interventions can take place is key to increase trust and aid implementation.

Highlights

  • Recent global commitments on land restoration, including the Bonn Challenge and the New YorkDeclaration on Forests, have placed forest restoration high on national agendas as a means to attainForests 2019, 10, 530; doi:10.3390/f10070530 www.mdpi.com/journal/forestsForests 2019, 10, 530 several sustainable development goals

  • We present our findings from semistructured interviews conducted at national, state and local scales in Brazil

  • Interviewees mentioned the need to resemble the national scale and that reflect the needs and expectations of the local, rural landowners. Improve communication of this possibility since the rural landowner does not consider productive. Despite this decreasing similarity from the global to the local scales, we found a prevailing ecological restorative actions as forest restoration and to draw attention to biodiversity versus productivity modernization narrative at all scales, which signals that improving the economics of forest restoration, trade-offs [60]

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Summary

Introduction

Recent global commitments on land restoration, including the Bonn Challenge and the New YorkDeclaration on Forests, have placed forest restoration high on national agendas as a means to attainForests 2019, 10, 530; doi:10.3390/f10070530 www.mdpi.com/journal/forestsForests 2019, 10, 530 several sustainable development goals. Recent global commitments on land restoration, including the Bonn Challenge and the New York. World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) coined the term Forest Landscape Restoration (FLR) as “a planned process that aims to regain ecological integrity and enhance human well-being in deforested or degraded landscapes” [1]. This definition implies that FLR programs should incorporate ecological, social, and economic dimensions among their implementation strategies [2,3,4]. A recent review conducted by Brower [6]

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