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    Rehabilitasi hutan di Indonesia: akan kemanakah arahnya setelah lebih dari tiga dasawarsa?

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    Authors
    Nawir, A.A.
    Murniati
    Rumboko, L.
    Date Issued
    2008
    Language
    id
    Type
    Book
    Accessibility
    Open Access
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    Citation
    Nawir, A.A., Murniati, Rumboko, L., (eds.) 2008. Rehabilitasi hutan di Indonesia: akan kemanakah arahnya setelah lebih dari tiga dasawarsa? . Review of Forest Rehabilitation: Lessons from the Past Bogor, Indonesia, Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR). 283p. ISBN: 978-979-1412-35-3..
    Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19858
    External link to download this item: https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/2455
    Abstract/Description
    Rehabilitation activities in Indonesia have a long-history of more than three decades, implemented in more than 400 locations. Successful projects are characterised by the active involvement of local people, and the technical intervention used tailored to address the specific ecological causes of degradation that concern local people. However, sustaining the positive impacts beyond the project time is still the biggest challenge. Rehabilitation efforts have been lagging behind the increasing rates of deforestation and land degradation. This has been largely due to the complexities of the driving factors causing the degradation, which neither projects nor have other government programmes been able to simultaneously address. Currently, there are more complex driving factors of deforestation to be dealt with, such as illegal logging and forest encroachment. Therefore, addressing the causes of deforestation and land degradation, which usually are also the continuing disturbances threatening sustainable rehabilitation activities, should be part of the project’s priorities. Designing the right economic and social incentives is important to stimulate greater community roles in rehabilitation initiatives. Project derived economic and livelihood benefits, generated from ecological improvements, tend to sustain in the long-term more than the benefits from project-based economic opportunities.
    AGROVOC Keywords
    forests; degraded forests; rehabilitation; forest plantations; afforestation; forestry policies; projects; funding; case studies; history; development plans; socioeconomics
    Subjects
    PLANTATIONS AND REHABILITATION OF DEGRADED FORESTS;
    Countries
    Indonesia
    Regions
    South-eastern Asia
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    • CIFOR publications [7743]

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