Tenure and management of non-state forests in China since 1950: a historical review

This article reviews the policies for the tenure and management of non-state forests that have undergone fundamental changes in China since the early 1950s. Private ownership and household management that were dominant in 1950-55 gave way to collectivization in 1956. Collective management remained d...

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Main Author: Liu Dachang
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18376
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author_facet Liu Dachang
author_sort Liu Dachang
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description This article reviews the policies for the tenure and management of non-state forests that have undergone fundamental changes in China since the early 1950s. Private ownership and household management that were dominant in 1950-55 gave way to collectivization in 1956. Collective management remained dominant until reforms in the early 1980s. Since that time, rapid changes in tenure and management policy have given households more control over tree and forest resources. However, this high frequency of policy change causes a complete lack of confidence on villagers in tenure security. This has encouraged the rapid conversion of forest resources by farmers. The government and forest departments responded by promoting various shareholding systems and farmer households are also trying out new forms of collaboration of one kind or another. Empirical evidence shows that self-initiating shareholder systems created on voluntary basis perform better than those shareholding systems that are merely disguised form of former collective management. They build on existing, local, social capital and farmers are able to participate in making decision about planning, management activities, product use, and income distribution, which is the core of local forest management. Even so this is not sufficient to achieve the desired results in the case of timber trees. These trees are subject to many regulations that discourage investment in them. It is critical to vest villagers with full rights to their trees. China should apply separate regulations to natural forests and artificial plantations that are established from now on.
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spelling CGSpace183762025-01-24T14:13:07Z Tenure and management of non-state forests in China since 1950: a historical review Liu Dachang tenure systems forest resources forest management private ownership households property rights regulations forestry policies institutions community forestry This article reviews the policies for the tenure and management of non-state forests that have undergone fundamental changes in China since the early 1950s. Private ownership and household management that were dominant in 1950-55 gave way to collectivization in 1956. Collective management remained dominant until reforms in the early 1980s. Since that time, rapid changes in tenure and management policy have given households more control over tree and forest resources. However, this high frequency of policy change causes a complete lack of confidence on villagers in tenure security. This has encouraged the rapid conversion of forest resources by farmers. The government and forest departments responded by promoting various shareholding systems and farmer households are also trying out new forms of collaboration of one kind or another. Empirical evidence shows that self-initiating shareholder systems created on voluntary basis perform better than those shareholding systems that are merely disguised form of former collective management. They build on existing, local, social capital and farmers are able to participate in making decision about planning, management activities, product use, and income distribution, which is the core of local forest management. Even so this is not sufficient to achieve the desired results in the case of timber trees. These trees are subject to many regulations that discourage investment in them. It is critical to vest villagers with full rights to their trees. China should apply separate regulations to natural forests and artificial plantations that are established from now on. 2001 2012-06-04T09:06:23Z 2012-06-04T09:06:23Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18376 en Liu Dachang. 2001. Tenure and management of non-state forests in China since 1950: a historical review . Environmental History 6 (2) :239-263.
spellingShingle tenure systems
forest resources
forest management
private ownership
households
property rights
regulations
forestry policies
institutions
community forestry
Liu Dachang
Tenure and management of non-state forests in China since 1950: a historical review
title Tenure and management of non-state forests in China since 1950: a historical review
title_full Tenure and management of non-state forests in China since 1950: a historical review
title_fullStr Tenure and management of non-state forests in China since 1950: a historical review
title_full_unstemmed Tenure and management of non-state forests in China since 1950: a historical review
title_short Tenure and management of non-state forests in China since 1950: a historical review
title_sort tenure and management of non state forests in china since 1950 a historical review
topic tenure systems
forest resources
forest management
private ownership
households
property rights
regulations
forestry policies
institutions
community forestry
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18376
work_keys_str_mv AT liudachang tenureandmanagementofnonstateforestsinchinasince1950ahistoricalreview