Nayak Prateep K, Berkes Fikret
Natural Resources Institute, University of Manitoba, 70 Dysart Road, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
Environ Manage. 2008 May;41(5):707-18. doi: 10.1007/s00267-008-9088-4.
The article considers the impact of introducing government co-management policy in the form of Joint Forest Management (JFM) in an area with a five-decade-old self-organized community forest management system in Orissa, India. We ask a question that appears not to have been previously examined: What happens when JFM replaces an already existing community forest management arrangement? Our comparison of the JFM arrangement with the self-organized community forest management regime (pre- and post-2002 in a selected village) provides three conclusions: (1) The level of villager participation in forest management has declined, along with the erosion of the bundle of common rights held by them; (2) multiple institutional linkages between the village and outside agencies, and reciprocal relations with neighboring villages have been abandoned in favor of a close relationship with the Forestry Department; and (3) the administration of the forestry resource has become politicized. We conclude that the "one-size-fits-all" approach of the JFM, with its pre-packaged objectives and its narrow scope of forest management, is likely to limit experimentation, learning, and institutional innovation that characterizes community forest management.
本文探讨了在印度奥里萨邦一个有着50年自组织社区森林管理系统的地区,以联合森林管理(JFM)形式引入政府共同管理政策所产生的影响。我们提出了一个似乎此前未被研究过的问题:当JFM取代现有的社区森林管理安排时会发生什么?我们将JFM安排与自组织社区森林管理制度(在一个选定村庄2002年前后)进行比较,得出了三个结论:(1)村民参与森林管理的程度下降,他们所拥有的一系列共有权利也受到侵蚀;(2)村庄与外部机构之间的多重制度联系以及与相邻村庄的互惠关系被放弃,转而与林业部门建立紧密关系;(3)森林资源的管理已被政治化。我们得出结论,JFM的“一刀切”方法,因其预先设定的目标和狭窄的森林管理范围,可能会限制社区森林管理所特有的试验、学习和制度创新。