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Community-Based Forest Management (CBFM) in Bangladesh

Tapan Kumar Nath, Mohammed Jashimuddin, Makoto Inoue, et al.

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ca. 96,29
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Springer International Publishing img Link Publisher

Naturwissenschaften, Medizin, Informatik, Technik / Landwirtschaft, Gartenbau

Beschreibung

The book is immensely beneficial to the readers to have a clear understanding of various CBFM practices prevailing in Bangladesh.
Providing a comprehensive and critical analysis of success stories concerning several CBFM practices in different forest areas of Bangladesh, together with their respective strengths and weaknesses, it identifies sharing authority to take decision by the community as one of the main weaknesses. The other main weakness is the lack of beat level authority to coordinate with community for making the process vibrant. The book determines that it is the community patrol group which is most effective under the co-management system, yet the general body and executive committee of the co-management system are composed of different stakeholders, each of which is subject to their own work pressures, and are not as effective as claimed. There is a need to empower communities living in and around forests, and to create ownership of the forests so that theycan feel that the forests around them are by the community and for the community.

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Schlagwörter

climate change, Livelihoods, Biodiversity, Sustainability, Forestry Management, Decentralized Forest Governance, Social Capital