REDD+ Conflict: Understanding the Pathways between Forest Projects and Social Conflict
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Selection of Cases
3.2. Overview of Cases
4. Results
4.1. Conflict Pathways
4.2. Effects of Conflict on Local Communities
4.3. Community Responses to Conflict
4.4. Conflict Mitigation Measures
5. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Short Biography of Authors
Thematic Focus | REDD+ (Carbon Offset) |
---|---|
Level of detail | High enough to retrace the conflict pathway |
Method | Field research |
Publication | Peer-reviewed journal article |
Country (Authors) | Effects of Conflict on Local Communities | Communities’ Response |
---|---|---|
Ethiopia (Kemerink-Seyoum et al. [29]) | Loss of
|
|
Uganda (Cavanagh and Benjaminsen [26]) | Loss of
|
|
Uganda (Blum [25]) | Loss of
|
|
Tanzania (Masarella et al. [27]) | Loss of
|
|
Tanzania (Scheba and Rakotonarivo [37]) |
|
|
Vietnam (Hoang et. al. [32]) | Loss of
|
|
Indonesia (Galudra et. al. [30]) | Loss of
|
|
Panama (Holmes et al. [31]) | Loss of
|
|
Country (Authors) | Conflict Mitigation Measures |
---|---|
Ethiopia (Kemerink-Seyoum et al. [29]) | Court ruled in favour of farmers as legal tenants of land, and they should be allowed to return to it. Forest cooperative’s unilateral decision to pay cash to its members under the pretext of micro-credit services. |
Uganda (Cavanagh and Benjaminsen [26]) | Project subjected to a series of independent examinations by one of the world’s largest and most respected audit firms. Favourable consent judgment that recognised the community as the ‘‘historical and indigenous’’ inhabitants of the Mount Elgon Forest. Further evictions and destruction of property stopped by the court. |
Uganda (Blum [25]) | Regular meetings between government and local community to clarify land titles. Changes in the enforcement policy from a strict one-to-one dialogue. Collaborative livelihood support programmes established. Dismissal/reduction of the number of forest guards. Grievance procedure to investigate conflict claims was carried out by a carbon market consultant. Company stopped tree planting on 1000 ha. of land, contested by neighbouring farmers. Matter forwarded to NFA to seek clarity about its owners. Depending on the age of planted trees, the company tolerates cattle grazing within the reserve. Company built six boreholes and 15 valley dams close to the project area for the farmers to freely access water. Access to restricted area regulated by formal protocol. Collaborative monitoring with local leaders. Company emphasizes peaceful co-existence between “good neighbours”, as well as attracting enough rain for the future. |
Tanzania (Masarella et al. [27]) | No mitigation measures implemented, |
Tanzania (Scheba and Rakotonarivo [37]) | New forest governance developed and implemented. Equal payment scheme created. Legitimate land boundaries developed. Integrated land-use planning exercises discussed, mapped, and documented. |
Vietnam (Hoang et. al. [32]) | No mitigation measures noted. |
Indonesia (Galudra et. al. [30]) | New land-use plan developed. Villagers co-manage a private rubber plantation company. Benefit-sharing of rubber plantation under negotiation. |
Panama (Holmes et al. [31]) | Formation of Advisory Council on Conflict Resolution and REDD+. |
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Alusiola, R.A.; Schilling, J.; Klär, P. REDD+ Conflict: Understanding the Pathways between Forest Projects and Social Conflict. Forests 2021, 12, 748. https://doi.org/10.3390/f12060748
Alusiola RA, Schilling J, Klär P. REDD+ Conflict: Understanding the Pathways between Forest Projects and Social Conflict. Forests. 2021; 12(6):748. https://doi.org/10.3390/f12060748
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlusiola, Rowan Alumasa, Janpeter Schilling, and Paul Klär. 2021. "REDD+ Conflict: Understanding the Pathways between Forest Projects and Social Conflict" Forests 12, no. 6: 748. https://doi.org/10.3390/f12060748
APA StyleAlusiola, R. A., Schilling, J., & Klär, P. (2021). REDD+ Conflict: Understanding the Pathways between Forest Projects and Social Conflict. Forests, 12(6), 748. https://doi.org/10.3390/f12060748