Abstract

This study reviewed the policies and outcomes of international support for forest management in Nepal and answered whether international support on forest management in developing countries resulted in positive socioeconomic and environmental outcomes at local communities. The evaluation is based on the socio-ecological theory and synergies-tradeoff model of forestry ecosystems goods and services. The study shows that the international interventions influenced national policies and community forestry practices, which contributed to the remarkable increase of forest stock. The new forestry institutions increased timber product supplies to urban users and contributed to offsetting of greenhouse gas emission of affluent societies in overseas. However, the intervention spoiled centuries of old forestry practices, which had contributed to the evolvement of socio-ecological condition, sustained local economy and environment systems. The new forestry institutions and practices locked local opportunities of multipurpose uses of forest, worsened water yield and local knowledge, and hampered local economic activities. Consequently they affected habitat diversities for forest based species, and forest resource supplies for sustaining agrobiodiversities and local food security. In reality the interventions increased benefit to distant users (urban users in the country and affluent societies in overseas) and further marginalized local communities and particularly socially disadvantaged people. The paper shows that the international forestry policies and supports are technically wrong or poorly based on science which is against their promise of providing better technical supports and benefiting local communities in developing countries. It argues that the interventions created many complexities in forestry institutions and practices which require too costly endeavor to change and address the local socioeconomic and environmental problems. The paper has explained the root cause of the international policy problem on many schools of thought.

Highlights

  • Forestry is a common property in many developing countries and in mountain regions

  • This study reviewed emerging local environmental, economic and social problems associated with international interventions on managing common property forest resources for global environmental conservation

  • The purpose of this study is to explain whether international interventions and supports on forest management in developing countries result in positive socioeconomic and environmental outcomes at local communities

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Summary

Introduction

Forestry is a common property in many developing countries and in mountain regions. The centuries old community practices of managing the forestry resources for multiple uses have modified natural systems which resulted in the development of social-ecological systems (e.g., forest product based agro-biodiversity and indigenous knowledge) that significantly shape ecosystems in the Nepali mountain landscape today. This land distribution pattern hardly found in most European countries where the land is extensively privatized and used in farming, e.g., 75 per cent of the land area in UK. Local fund has been generated for forest and other community development by selling of forest products and recently carbon emission reduction service in few groups (Khadka et al, 2012)

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