Managing a Global Resource: Challenges of Forest Conservation and Development

Managing a Global Resource: Challenges of Forest Conservation and Development

Managing a Global Resource: Challenges of Forest Conservation and Development

Managing a Global Resource: Challenges of Forest Conservation and Development

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Overview

The rapid loss of tropical forests, particularly in the developing world, has been a global concern since the late 1980s and has prompted a variety of international initiatives to save the forests. In 1991, the World Bank responded to global concerns and to criticism by nongovernmental organizations by forming a conservation-oriented forest strategy. Managing a Global Resource is an outgrowth of the independent evaluation conducted by the World Bank's Operations Evaluation Department and discusses how effectively that strategy was implemented. In this detailed investigation, Uma J. Lele explores why the loss of forests and biodiversity has been so rapid in some developing countries (Brazil, Indonesia, and Cameroon) and not in others (China, India, and Costa Rica). She assesses future prospects for conservation in these six countries by critically examining their policies, institutional arrangements, and emerging national and international instruments to conserve forests and biodiversity. Together these six countries account for 25 percent of the world's forest cover and 44 percent of the world's population. Managing a Global Resource presents case studies of the forest sectors of each country in the context of overall development policies, interest groups, and governance issues. Lele's investigation finds a fundamental divergence in forest-rich countries between the global objectives of conservation and the local objectives of development and private profit. In some forest-poor countries, in contrast, natural resource loss has led the countries on their own accord to adopt a variety of conservation-oriented policies and programs. Despite the greater congruence between the global and national objectives in these forest-poor countries, competing demands on their resources and the constraints on their policies, institutions, and human capital make it difficult for them to affect forest and biodiversity conservation. This volume makes it clear that


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781351507301
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 07/12/2017
Series: Advances in Evaluation & Development
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 312
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Uma J. Lele

Table of Contents

1: Managing a Global Resource: An Overview; 2: Costa Rica: At the Cutting Edge; 3: China: The World’s Largest Experiment in Conservation and Development; 4: India’s Forests: Potential for Poverty Alleviation; 5: A New Deal for Cameroon’s Forests?; 6: Forest Management in Indonesia: Moving from Autocratic Regime to Decentralized Democracy; 7: Brazil’s Forests: Managing Tradeoffs among Local, National, and International Interests; 8: The Way Ahead
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