Accommodating multiple interests in local forest management: a focus on facilitation, actors and practices
Citation
Engel, P.G.H., Hoeberichts, A., Umans, L. 2001. Accommodating multiple interests in local forest management: a focus on facilitation, actors and practices . International Journal of Agricultural Resources, Governance and Ecology 1 (3/4) :306-326. ISSN: 1462-4605.
Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18548
External link to download this item: https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/1074
Abstract/Description
This paper is concerned with three questions. When, if at all, is facilitation worthwhile? When dealing with local forest management, what exactly should facilitators focus on? How does empowerment fit into facilitation efforts? Two case studies, one concerned with the establishment of the Bahuaja-Sonene National Park in Peru, the other with the impact of changes in forest legislation on the Yuracare in the Bolivian tropics, are presented. The conclusion is that mismatches between competent performances rather than conflicts of interests between relevant stakeholders are most involved when problems arise. To overcome these, facilitation should address at least three types of accommodation processes: learning-in-practice, learning-across-practices and resource-use negotiation. Moreover, it should define itself within a particular context. Facilitation strategies should be defined according to the type of situation the stakeholders are in. Key elements for judging fundamentally different situations are suggested. Empowerment is seen as a necessary element for strengthening the stakeholders' capacity to act and interact effectively in their search for new options and solutions.
AGROVOC Keywords
Subjects
FOREST GOVERNANCE AND COMMUNITY FORESTRY;Regions
South AmericaCollections
- CIFOR publications [7743]
