Second-tier community forestry organisations and equitable resource management in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Guatemala

Whilst community forestry programmes have combined sustainable forestry with community empowerment and poverty alleviation since the late 1970s, the role of intermediary organisations in shaping the technical and political capacities of forest user groups has rarely been systematically studied. The...

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Autores principales: Millner, N., Penagaricano, I., Fernández, M., Snook, Laura K.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/78521
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author Millner, N.
Penagaricano, I.
Fernández, M.
Snook, Laura K.
author_browse Fernández, M.
Millner, N.
Penagaricano, I.
Snook, Laura K.
author_facet Millner, N.
Penagaricano, I.
Fernández, M.
Snook, Laura K.
author_sort Millner, N.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Whilst community forestry programmes have combined sustainable forestry with community empowerment and poverty alleviation since the late 1970s, the role of intermediary organisations in shaping the technical and political capacities of forest user groups has rarely been systematically studied. The long-term durability of community forestry groups has been linked with the congruence between local and national determinations of tenure rights, and the involvement of local communities in determining the ‘rules' that govern the management of the forests. However, the role of intermediary organisations in negotiating such rights and rules is of central analytical importance - especially in contexts where pre-existing power and gender relationships influence who makes which decisions and how, and where long-standing conflicts over access to land constantly over-determine the possibilities for upscaling successful projects. As part of an interdisciplinary project on community forestry in Mesoamerica led by Bioversity International, this paper focuses on the case of the Asociación de Comunidades Forestales de Petén [ACOFOP], a second-tier community organisation founded in the mid-1990s to coordinate and represent first-tier organisations that were granted community concessions in the Maya Biosphere Reserve in the Petén region of Guatemala. Drawing on interviews, the outcomes of participative workshops, and a review of key literature, we trace ACOFOP's emergence as a forestry organisation from existing agricultural and non-timber product cooperatives, and its subsequent consolidation as a platform for regional coordination and advocacy. Using a ‘Sociology of Knowledge' approach to discourse analysis (SKAD), we highlight three important dimensions of ACOFOP's evolving strategy that facilitate the development of both local autonomies and collective coherence: the mobilisation of concepts of ‘environmental justice' and associated international rights frameworks to link local concerns with national governance issues; the elaboration of legal knowledges and mechanisms in these terms to negotiate improved tenure relationships; and a concentration of resources in the development of local leadership with an emphasis on elaborating the fixed ‘rules' of forestry management in a manner that is appropriate to each community's individual characteristics. We conclude by highlighting key strategies that may be applied to strengthen community forestry in other regional settings.
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spelling CGSpace785212025-11-05T07:30:39Z Second-tier community forestry organisations and equitable resource management in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Guatemala Millner, N. Penagaricano, I. Fernández, M. Snook, Laura K. community forestry genetic resources forests migration nongovernmental organisations Whilst community forestry programmes have combined sustainable forestry with community empowerment and poverty alleviation since the late 1970s, the role of intermediary organisations in shaping the technical and political capacities of forest user groups has rarely been systematically studied. The long-term durability of community forestry groups has been linked with the congruence between local and national determinations of tenure rights, and the involvement of local communities in determining the ‘rules' that govern the management of the forests. However, the role of intermediary organisations in negotiating such rights and rules is of central analytical importance - especially in contexts where pre-existing power and gender relationships influence who makes which decisions and how, and where long-standing conflicts over access to land constantly over-determine the possibilities for upscaling successful projects. As part of an interdisciplinary project on community forestry in Mesoamerica led by Bioversity International, this paper focuses on the case of the Asociación de Comunidades Forestales de Petén [ACOFOP], a second-tier community organisation founded in the mid-1990s to coordinate and represent first-tier organisations that were granted community concessions in the Maya Biosphere Reserve in the Petén region of Guatemala. Drawing on interviews, the outcomes of participative workshops, and a review of key literature, we trace ACOFOP's emergence as a forestry organisation from existing agricultural and non-timber product cooperatives, and its subsequent consolidation as a platform for regional coordination and advocacy. Using a ‘Sociology of Knowledge' approach to discourse analysis (SKAD), we highlight three important dimensions of ACOFOP's evolving strategy that facilitate the development of both local autonomies and collective coherence: the mobilisation of concepts of ‘environmental justice' and associated international rights frameworks to link local concerns with national governance issues; the elaboration of legal knowledges and mechanisms in these terms to negotiate improved tenure relationships; and a concentration of resources in the development of local leadership with an emphasis on elaborating the fixed ‘rules' of forestry management in a manner that is appropriate to each community's individual characteristics. We conclude by highlighting key strategies that may be applied to strengthen community forestry in other regional settings. 2016 2016-12-27T10:32:10Z 2016-12-27T10:32:10Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/78521 en Open Access application/pdf application/pdf Millner, N.; Penagaricano, I.; Fernandez, M.; Snook, L. (2016) Second-tier community forestry organisations and equitable resource management in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Guatemala. [Abstract] presented at: Tropentag 2016: Solidarity in a competing world - fair use of resources. Vienna (Austria) Sep 18-21. 1 p.
spellingShingle community forestry
genetic resources
forests
migration
nongovernmental organisations
Millner, N.
Penagaricano, I.
Fernández, M.
Snook, Laura K.
Second-tier community forestry organisations and equitable resource management in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Guatemala
title Second-tier community forestry organisations and equitable resource management in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Guatemala
title_full Second-tier community forestry organisations and equitable resource management in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Guatemala
title_fullStr Second-tier community forestry organisations and equitable resource management in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Guatemala
title_full_unstemmed Second-tier community forestry organisations and equitable resource management in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Guatemala
title_short Second-tier community forestry organisations and equitable resource management in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Guatemala
title_sort second tier community forestry organisations and equitable resource management in the maya biosphere reserve guatemala
topic community forestry
genetic resources
forests
migration
nongovernmental organisations
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/78521
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