Women’s leadership in community-led forest governance in India

Forests are critical to sustaining the lives and environments of rural communities in India, home to the largest forest-dependent population in the world. Rural women tend to be particularly reliant on forests for fuelwood, food, fodder, medicine and more. For this reason, women are often the primar...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kachhap, Apurwa, Ravani, Khanjan, Rana, Meenu, Misra, Deepannita, Madappa, P.S., Morgan, Miranda, Elias, Marlene
Format: News Item
Language:Inglés
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175150
Description
Summary:Forests are critical to sustaining the lives and environments of rural communities in India, home to the largest forest-dependent population in the world. Rural women tend to be particularly reliant on forests for fuelwood, food, fodder, medicine and more. For this reason, women are often the primary stewards of these common resources, relying on gender-specific knowledge of harvesting, processing, use and management. Yet women continue to face gender-based discrimination and marginalization in forest governance, and are less likely than men to take on meaningful leadership roles. This article explores how some women have managed to overcome these barriers to play active roles in forest governance and management, and what the outcomes of their leadership have been.