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Tenure and forest management in India

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Tenure and forest management in India how should we assess the JFM reform? Gunnar K hlin and colleagues Book workshop Lake View Hotel – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tenure and forest management in India


1
Tenure and forest management in India how
should we assess the JFM reform?
  • Gunnar Köhlin and colleagues
  • Book workshop Lake View Hotel
  • Land Reforms in Asia and Africa Impacts on
    Poverty and Natural Resource Management

2
Papers drawn upon
  • Woodfuels, Livelihoods, and Policy Interventions
    Changing Perspectives, Arnold, M., G. Köhlin and
    R. Persson (2006), World Development, Vol. 34/3
    pp 596-611.
  • Welfare Implications of Community Forestry
    Plantations in Developing Countries The Orissa
    Social Forestry Project, Köhlin, G. and G.S.
    Amacher (2005), American Journal of Agricultural
    Economics, Vol. 87/4, pp 855-869.
  • Fuelwood, forests and community management
    evidence from household studies, Cooke, P., G.
    Köhlin, and W.F. Hyde (2008), Environment and
    Development Economics.
  • Spatial Variability and Disincentives to Harvest
    Deforestation and Fuelwood Collection in South
    Asia, Köhlin, G. and P. J. Parks (2001), Land
    Economics, 77 (2) 206-218.

3
'The Other Energy Crisis Fuelwood'
  • Eckholm (1975)
  • "for more than a third of the world's people, the
    real energy crisis is a daily scramble to find
    the wood they need to cook dinner".
  • Application of gap models
  • (forest growth-consumptiondeforestation)
  • Fuelwood collection gt deforestation

4
Predictions/expectations
  • Massive deforestation
  • Scarcity of energy
  • Increased time collecting
  • Reduced production/leisure
  • Inferior fuels
  • Reduced nutrition and health
  • Increasing part of household budget to fuel

5
Implications
  • Large scale investments in community plantations
    (e.g. village woodlots)
  • Dissemination of seedlings to private households
    farm forestry.
  • Rehabilitation of government forests.
  • Dissemination of improved stoves, biogas etc.
  • Division of the country between donors (Sida,
    ODA, ADB etc) Sida took Tamil Nadu, Orissa and
    Bihar1 billion SEK over 10 years

6
The emergence of JFM in Orissa
  • Forest Department, parastatal/paramilitary/
    corrupt/inefficient in managing forests.
  • Donor supported Social Forestry Wing
  • 100 000 ha of community plantations
  • (reduced tension against informal protection?)
  • Informal protection committees established
  • JFM established in West Bengal
  • Great majority positive to JFM in Orissa sample
  • Widespread adoption

7
JFM
  • Early experiences from West Bengal in the 1970s
  • Supportive legislation in 1988 and 1990.
  • Wide coverage in 1990s
  • In 2003 17 Mha, managed by 85 000 forest
    protection committees covering 170 000 villages
    in 27 states.
  • Important tool to reach long-term forest cover
    objectives.

8
Institutional issues
  • Shift from social forestry to local management of
    natural forests.
  • More conservation than basic needs.
  • Constrained fuelwood collection.
  • Efficiency vs equity.
  • Women and landless negatively affected
  • Does devolution of power really mean less
    government control?

9
Concerns of constrained collection
  • Displacement effect?
  • Collection in neighboring areas
  • Replacement effect?
  • Own plantation of fuelwood trees
  • Market purchase
  • Fuel switching
  • Reduced consumption?
  • Increased time allocation?

10
Review impact on forests
  • Ostwald et al. 2000. Indicating local protection
    efforts in forest vegetation change in Orissa,
    India using NOAA AVHRR data. Journal of Tropical
    Forest Science 12778-793
  • Somanathan et al. 2009. Decentralization for
    cost-effective conservation. PNAS 106(11).
  • Baland et al. 2008. Forests to the People
    Decentralization and Forest Degradation in the
    Indian Himalayas, draft.
  • Ravindranath and Sudha. 2004. Joint Forest
    Management in India Spread, Performance and
    Impact

11
Review impact on collection
  • - Agarwal, B. (2001), Participatory exclusion,
    community forestry, and gender an analysis for
    South Asia and a conceptual framework, World
    Development 29 16231648.
  • Bandyopadhyay and Shyamsundar, Fuelwood
    consumption and participation in community
    forestry in India, WBPRWP, 2004.
  • Ravindranath and Sudha. 2004. Joint Forest
    Management in India Spread, Performance and
    Impact

12
Review impact on equity
  • Agarwal, B. (2001), Participatory exclusion,
    community forestry, and gender an analysis for
    South Asia and a conceptual framework, World
    Development 29 16231648.
  • Adhikari, B. (2003), Property rights and natural
    resources socio-economic heterogeneity and
    distributional implications of common property
    resource management, Working Paper 1-03, South
    Asian Network for Development and Environmental
    Economics, Kathmandu, Nepal.
  • Kumar, S. (2002), Does participation in common
    pool resource management help the poor? A social
    costbenefit analysis of Joint Forest Management
    in Jharkhand, India, World Development 30
    763782.
  • Ravindranath and Sudha. 2004. Joint Forest
    Management in India Spread, Performance and
    Impact

13
Potential welfare impacts of SF
  • Aggregate individual WTP (CVM on additional
    community plantation in Environment and Devt
    Economics)
  • Impact on deforestation (Köhlin and Parks in Land
    Economics)
  • Impact on fuel consumption (thesis)
  • Impact on collection time (Köhlin and Amacher in
    American Journal of Agricultural Economics)

14
And colleagues?
  • Somanathan, Indian Statistical Institute, New
    Delhi
  • Ashokankur Datta
  • Ravindranath, Indian Institute of Science,
    Bangalore
  • Indu K Murthy
  • Madelene Ostwald, Gothenburg
  • Gundimeda, IIT Bombay

15
Potential data
  • NSSO, 54th round, 1998, special section on
    commons
  • Standard NSSO rounds
  • EERN data from six states during 2001-2002 (1421
    JFMC)
  • Forest Department records
  • Remote sensing

16
Potential research issues
  • Environment The impact on forest quality and
    effectiveness in arresting forest degradation
    (incl. spillover effects).
  • Equity The distribution of cost and benefits of
    the program on different segments of village
    population. (over time?) Links to participation
    in FUGs.
  • Efficiency the returns from alternative forest
    management

17
Potential strategy I
  • Identify villages in NSSO special round
  • Combine with general village level data
  • Combine with Forest Department data on year of
    JFM establishment, land use etc etc.
  • Combine with remote sensing data on vegetation

18
Potential strategy II
  • Start with EERN data
  • Combine with general village level data
  • Combine with Forest Department data on year of
    JFM establishment, land use etc etc.
  • Combine with remote sensing data on vegetation

19
Other alternatives
  • Review existing literature on devolution of
    forest management in India
  • Do original data collection, eg follow-up surveys
    based on EERN or Orissa data
  • Tree planting on private lands (farm forestry)
  • Social forestry (community plantations)
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