Rethinking Forest Partnerships and Benefit Sharing : Insights on Factors and Context that Make Collaborative Arrangements Work for Communities and Landowners

Forest-sector collaborative arrangements come in many forms. The local partner may be a community, an association, or a set of individual landholders. The outside partner may be a private organization or a government. The interest of the local part...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Other Agricultural Study
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2009/01/16262688/rethinking-forest-partnerships-benefit-sharing-insights-factors-context-make-collaborative-arrangements-work-communities-landowners
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12435
id okr-10986-12435
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-124352021-04-23T14:03:01Z Rethinking Forest Partnerships and Benefit Sharing : Insights on Factors and Context that Make Collaborative Arrangements Work for Communities and Landowners World Bank ABBREVIATIONS ACCESS TO LAND ACRONYMS AGRICULTURE ALLIANCES ARRANGEMENT ARRANGEMENTS ARTICLES BIBLIOGRAPHY BINDING BIODIVERSITY BOUNDARIES BUSINESS STRATEGY CAPACITY BUILDING CIVIL SOCIETY CLASSIFICATION COLLABORATION COMMUNITIES COMMUNITIES MANAGEMENT COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT COMMUNITY MEMBER COMMUNITY MEMBERS COMPENSATION COMPLEXITY CONFLICT CONFLICT RESOLUTION CONFLICT RESOLUTION MECHANISMS CONFLICTS CONTENTS CORE COMPETENCIES DATA COLLECTION DECISION MAKING DECISION-MAKING DEFORESTATION DESCRIPTION DESCRIPTIONS DISCUSSION DISCUSSIONS DISPUTE RESOLUTION DOCUMENTS EXTERNALITIES FINANCIAL SUPPORT FOREST FOREST RESOURCE FOREST RESOURCES FORESTS FUEL FUELWOOD GLOBALIZATION GOOD PRACTICE HOUSEHOLDS IDEAS IFC INDIGENOUS PEOPLES INFORMATION EXCHANGE INFORMATION SHARING INSIGHTS INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCES INTERNATIONAL LAW LAND ADMINISTRATION LAND RIGHTS LAND TENURE LAND USE LEASING MEETING MEETINGS MODALITIES MONOGRAPH MUTUAL RESPECT NATURAL RESOURCE NATURAL RESOURCES NEGOTIATION NEGOTIATIONS NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATION NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS PARTNERSHIP PLANTATIONS PROPERTY RIGHTS PROTOCOL PUBLIC GOOD PUBLIC LANDS RECONSTRUCTION REHABILITATION RESEARCHER RESOURCE USE RURAL DEVELOPMENT SANCTIONS SELF-DETERMINATION SETTLEMENT SITE SOCIAL RELATIONS THINKING USER USERS VARIETY VILLAGES WEB Forest-sector collaborative arrangements come in many forms. The local partner may be a community, an association, or a set of individual landholders. The outside partner may be a private organization or a government. The interest of the local partner may be production of income from the forest, security of access to land, increased labor or small business opportunities, protection of traditionally valued resources, or other values. The interest of the outside partner may be similarly varied, from securing access to forest products, to obtaining the cooperation of the local community in the partner's resource use, to securing a source of labor, to alleviation of rural poverty, to production of environmental services and management of risks. Establishing arrangements that effectively deliver sustainable forest management and benefit local communities is a challenge because of the range of participants, objectives, and scales of partnerships and benefit-sharing arrangements. This study uses an evidence-based approach to provide insights into developing and maintaining collaborative arrangements in the forest sector. It aims to inform discussions and approaches to forest partnership and benefit-sharing arrangements. It also offers guidance on how to implement key factors that influence contract-based forest partnerships and benefit-sharing arrangements. 2013-02-20T21:01:59Z 2013-02-20T21:01:59Z 2009-01 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2009/01/16262688/rethinking-forest-partnerships-benefit-sharing-insights-factors-context-make-collaborative-arrangements-work-communities-landowners http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12435 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Other Agricultural Study Economic & Sector Work
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ABBREVIATIONS
ACCESS TO LAND
ACRONYMS
AGRICULTURE
ALLIANCES
ARRANGEMENT
ARRANGEMENTS
ARTICLES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
BINDING
BIODIVERSITY
BOUNDARIES
BUSINESS STRATEGY
CAPACITY BUILDING
CIVIL SOCIETY
CLASSIFICATION
COLLABORATION
COMMUNITIES
COMMUNITIES MANAGEMENT
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT
COMMUNITY MEMBER
COMMUNITY MEMBERS
COMPENSATION
COMPLEXITY
CONFLICT
CONFLICT RESOLUTION
CONFLICT RESOLUTION MECHANISMS
CONFLICTS
CONTENTS
CORE COMPETENCIES
DATA COLLECTION
DECISION MAKING
DECISION-MAKING
DEFORESTATION
DESCRIPTION
DESCRIPTIONS
DISCUSSION
DISCUSSIONS
DISPUTE RESOLUTION
DOCUMENTS
EXTERNALITIES
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
FOREST
FOREST RESOURCE
FOREST RESOURCES
FORESTS
FUEL
FUELWOOD
GLOBALIZATION
GOOD PRACTICE
HOUSEHOLDS
IDEAS
IFC
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
INFORMATION EXCHANGE
INFORMATION SHARING
INSIGHTS
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE
INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCES
INTERNATIONAL LAW
LAND ADMINISTRATION
LAND RIGHTS
LAND TENURE
LAND USE
LEASING
MEETING
MEETINGS
MODALITIES
MONOGRAPH
MUTUAL RESPECT
NATURAL RESOURCE
NATURAL RESOURCES
NEGOTIATION
NEGOTIATIONS
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATION
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
PARTNERSHIP
PLANTATIONS
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PROTOCOL
PUBLIC GOOD
PUBLIC LANDS
RECONSTRUCTION
REHABILITATION
RESEARCHER
RESOURCE USE
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
SANCTIONS
SELF-DETERMINATION
SETTLEMENT
SITE
SOCIAL RELATIONS
THINKING
USER
USERS
VARIETY
VILLAGES
WEB
spellingShingle ABBREVIATIONS
ACCESS TO LAND
ACRONYMS
AGRICULTURE
ALLIANCES
ARRANGEMENT
ARRANGEMENTS
ARTICLES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
BINDING
BIODIVERSITY
BOUNDARIES
BUSINESS STRATEGY
CAPACITY BUILDING
CIVIL SOCIETY
CLASSIFICATION
COLLABORATION
COMMUNITIES
COMMUNITIES MANAGEMENT
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT
COMMUNITY MEMBER
COMMUNITY MEMBERS
COMPENSATION
COMPLEXITY
CONFLICT
CONFLICT RESOLUTION
CONFLICT RESOLUTION MECHANISMS
CONFLICTS
CONTENTS
CORE COMPETENCIES
DATA COLLECTION
DECISION MAKING
DECISION-MAKING
DEFORESTATION
DESCRIPTION
DESCRIPTIONS
DISCUSSION
DISCUSSIONS
DISPUTE RESOLUTION
DOCUMENTS
EXTERNALITIES
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
FOREST
FOREST RESOURCE
FOREST RESOURCES
FORESTS
FUEL
FUELWOOD
GLOBALIZATION
GOOD PRACTICE
HOUSEHOLDS
IDEAS
IFC
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
INFORMATION EXCHANGE
INFORMATION SHARING
INSIGHTS
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE
INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCES
INTERNATIONAL LAW
LAND ADMINISTRATION
LAND RIGHTS
LAND TENURE
LAND USE
LEASING
MEETING
MEETINGS
MODALITIES
MONOGRAPH
MUTUAL RESPECT
NATURAL RESOURCE
NATURAL RESOURCES
NEGOTIATION
NEGOTIATIONS
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATION
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
PARTNERSHIP
PLANTATIONS
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PROTOCOL
PUBLIC GOOD
PUBLIC LANDS
RECONSTRUCTION
REHABILITATION
RESEARCHER
RESOURCE USE
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
SANCTIONS
SELF-DETERMINATION
SETTLEMENT
SITE
SOCIAL RELATIONS
THINKING
USER
USERS
VARIETY
VILLAGES
WEB
World Bank
Rethinking Forest Partnerships and Benefit Sharing : Insights on Factors and Context that Make Collaborative Arrangements Work for Communities and Landowners
description Forest-sector collaborative arrangements come in many forms. The local partner may be a community, an association, or a set of individual landholders. The outside partner may be a private organization or a government. The interest of the local partner may be production of income from the forest, security of access to land, increased labor or small business opportunities, protection of traditionally valued resources, or other values. The interest of the outside partner may be similarly varied, from securing access to forest products, to obtaining the cooperation of the local community in the partner's resource use, to securing a source of labor, to alleviation of rural poverty, to production of environmental services and management of risks. Establishing arrangements that effectively deliver sustainable forest management and benefit local communities is a challenge because of the range of participants, objectives, and scales of partnerships and benefit-sharing arrangements. This study uses an evidence-based approach to provide insights into developing and maintaining collaborative arrangements in the forest sector. It aims to inform discussions and approaches to forest partnership and benefit-sharing arrangements. It also offers guidance on how to implement key factors that influence contract-based forest partnerships and benefit-sharing arrangements.
format Economic & Sector Work :: Other Agricultural Study
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Rethinking Forest Partnerships and Benefit Sharing : Insights on Factors and Context that Make Collaborative Arrangements Work for Communities and Landowners
title_short Rethinking Forest Partnerships and Benefit Sharing : Insights on Factors and Context that Make Collaborative Arrangements Work for Communities and Landowners
title_full Rethinking Forest Partnerships and Benefit Sharing : Insights on Factors and Context that Make Collaborative Arrangements Work for Communities and Landowners
title_fullStr Rethinking Forest Partnerships and Benefit Sharing : Insights on Factors and Context that Make Collaborative Arrangements Work for Communities and Landowners
title_full_unstemmed Rethinking Forest Partnerships and Benefit Sharing : Insights on Factors and Context that Make Collaborative Arrangements Work for Communities and Landowners
title_sort rethinking forest partnerships and benefit sharing : insights on factors and context that make collaborative arrangements work for communities and landowners
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2009/01/16262688/rethinking-forest-partnerships-benefit-sharing-insights-factors-context-make-collaborative-arrangements-work-communities-landowners
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12435
_version_ 1764419814697205760