Toward improved impact evaluation of community forest management in Indonesia

Erik Meijaard , Truly Santika, Kerrie A Wilson, Sugeng Budiharta , Ahmad Kusworo , Elizabeth A. Law, Rachel Friedman, Joseph A. Hutabarat, Tito P. Indrawan, Freya A. V. St John, Matthew Struebig

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Abstract

Many tropical countries continue to devolve forest management to forest-dwelling communities. The assumption is that local knowledge of forests and community
engagement in forest management will attain multiple social and environmental
co-benefits, such as poverty alleviation and reduced deforestation and fires.
Evidence for this, however, is scant, commonly hampered by data availability
and a lack of technical capacity for implementing statistically robust impact
evaluations. Based on a practice-based review of policy implementation,
impact evaluation of case studies and examples of counterfactual analyses
from Indonesia, we demonstrate that it is increasingly feasible to determine
the conditions under which community forest management will most likely
achieve its social and environmental objectives. Adapting community forest
management implementation based on feedback from accurate impact evaluation could lead to positive outcomes for people and environment in Indonesia, and across the tropical realm
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2189
JournalConservation Science and Practice
Volume3
Issue number1
Early online date17 Feb 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2021

Keywords

  • biodiversity
  • conservation
  • deforestation
  • forest
  • impact evaluation
  • poverty
  • tropical forest management
  • welfare

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