Seeing the forest for the service| The globalization of ecosystem services and decentralized forest governance in Nepal

<p> Forests are essential to the livelihoods of billions of people worldwide. In addition to furnishing valuable resources for both subsistence and commercial uses, they provide critical environmental services, including soil conservation, water supply, recreational opportunities, biodiversity...

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Main Author: Bushley, Bryan Robert
Language:EN
Published: University of Hawai'i at Manoa 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10085638
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-100856382016-04-08T04:13:13Z Seeing the forest for the service| The globalization of ecosystem services and decentralized forest governance in Nepal Bushley, Bryan Robert Geography|Public policy|Urban planning <p> Forests are essential to the livelihoods of billions of people worldwide. In addition to furnishing valuable resources for both subsistence and commercial uses, they provide critical environmental services, including soil conservation, water supply, recreational opportunities, biodiversity preservation, and carbon sequestration and storage. A new market-based paradigm for forest conservation based on payments for ecosystem services (PES) has emerged alongside state-led and community-based models. Various PES schemes have been introduced in order to harness the potential of regional and global markets to provide financial incentives to communities, private landowners and governments to protect and plant forests.</p><p> This doctoral dissertation examines the impacts of two international market-based responses to the pressing global environmental problems of deforestation and climate change&mdash;sustainable forest management certification and forest carbon trading (REDD+)&mdash;on the governance and wellbeing of the forests and communities that rely on them. Are these market-based conservation schemes compatible with local forest management priorities and needs? Do they exacerbate or alleviate existing governance issues and inequities? Do they promote inclusive and deliberative policymaking processes? In other words, can they fit into national and local contexts in ways that reinforce effective decentralized forest governance, especially the autonomy, rights, and livelihoods of forest communities? Focusing on Nepal, a country with a strong tradition of community-based forest management, this research probes these questions using two complementary empirical cases: (1) a study of SFM certification and REDD+ projects in Dolakha District; and (2) an assessment of national policymaking processes for REDD+. This facilitates an assessment of the implications of these globalized PES schemes for the future of decentralized forest governance in Nepal and other countries with community forestry initiatives.</p> University of Hawai'i at Manoa 2016-04-07 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10085638 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Geography|Public policy|Urban planning
spellingShingle Geography|Public policy|Urban planning
Bushley, Bryan Robert
Seeing the forest for the service| The globalization of ecosystem services and decentralized forest governance in Nepal
description <p> Forests are essential to the livelihoods of billions of people worldwide. In addition to furnishing valuable resources for both subsistence and commercial uses, they provide critical environmental services, including soil conservation, water supply, recreational opportunities, biodiversity preservation, and carbon sequestration and storage. A new market-based paradigm for forest conservation based on payments for ecosystem services (PES) has emerged alongside state-led and community-based models. Various PES schemes have been introduced in order to harness the potential of regional and global markets to provide financial incentives to communities, private landowners and governments to protect and plant forests.</p><p> This doctoral dissertation examines the impacts of two international market-based responses to the pressing global environmental problems of deforestation and climate change&mdash;sustainable forest management certification and forest carbon trading (REDD+)&mdash;on the governance and wellbeing of the forests and communities that rely on them. Are these market-based conservation schemes compatible with local forest management priorities and needs? Do they exacerbate or alleviate existing governance issues and inequities? Do they promote inclusive and deliberative policymaking processes? In other words, can they fit into national and local contexts in ways that reinforce effective decentralized forest governance, especially the autonomy, rights, and livelihoods of forest communities? Focusing on Nepal, a country with a strong tradition of community-based forest management, this research probes these questions using two complementary empirical cases: (1) a study of SFM certification and REDD+ projects in Dolakha District; and (2) an assessment of national policymaking processes for REDD+. This facilitates an assessment of the implications of these globalized PES schemes for the future of decentralized forest governance in Nepal and other countries with community forestry initiatives.</p>
author Bushley, Bryan Robert
author_facet Bushley, Bryan Robert
author_sort Bushley, Bryan Robert
title Seeing the forest for the service| The globalization of ecosystem services and decentralized forest governance in Nepal
title_short Seeing the forest for the service| The globalization of ecosystem services and decentralized forest governance in Nepal
title_full Seeing the forest for the service| The globalization of ecosystem services and decentralized forest governance in Nepal
title_fullStr Seeing the forest for the service| The globalization of ecosystem services and decentralized forest governance in Nepal
title_full_unstemmed Seeing the forest for the service| The globalization of ecosystem services and decentralized forest governance in Nepal
title_sort seeing the forest for the service| the globalization of ecosystem services and decentralized forest governance in nepal
publisher University of Hawai'i at Manoa
publishDate 2016
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10085638
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