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

Community forestry (CF) was initiated in the 1970s as a way to empower communities, alleviate poverty and manage forests. Intermediary organisations are considered to have played a critical role in the sustainability and equitability of community forest management. This study analyses a...

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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/10568/78522
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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 Community forestry (CF) was initiated in the 1970s as a way to empower communities, alleviate poverty and manage forests. Intermediary organisations are considered to have played a critical role in the sustainability and equitability of community forest management. This study analyses a second-tier institution, ACOFOP [Asociación de Comunidades Forestales de Petén], founded in the mid-1990s by local people in the Maya Biosphere Reserve [MBR] of Guatemala. ACOFOP has been lauded internationally for its success in supporting communities to achieve both economic and ecological sustainability. However, community forestry in the Petén, ACOFOP and the communities it supports still face multiple threats including challenges from private interests promoting tourism and other mega-projects in the region, and inconsistency in support from successive national governments. As part of an interdisciplinary project on community forestry in Mesoamerica led by Bioversity International, this study draws on participatory action research methods, interviews and literature to identify institutional, social and political factors that have enabled ACOFOP’s success, and could be applied to other contexts. The second dimension of this project maps and evaluate the language use by different actors in the MBR, focusing on differences in their perspectives on the meaning of institutional accompaniment .
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spelling CGSpace785222025-11-05T07:34:24Z 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 tenure nongovernmental organisations Community forestry (CF) was initiated in the 1970s as a way to empower communities, alleviate poverty and manage forests. Intermediary organisations are considered to have played a critical role in the sustainability and equitability of community forest management. This study analyses a second-tier institution, ACOFOP [Asociación de Comunidades Forestales de Petén], founded in the mid-1990s by local people in the Maya Biosphere Reserve [MBR] of Guatemala. ACOFOP has been lauded internationally for its success in supporting communities to achieve both economic and ecological sustainability. However, community forestry in the Petén, ACOFOP and the communities it supports still face multiple threats including challenges from private interests promoting tourism and other mega-projects in the region, and inconsistency in support from successive national governments. As part of an interdisciplinary project on community forestry in Mesoamerica led by Bioversity International, this study draws on participatory action research methods, interviews and literature to identify institutional, social and political factors that have enabled ACOFOP’s success, and could be applied to other contexts. The second dimension of this project maps and evaluate the language use by different actors in the MBR, focusing on differences in their perspectives on the meaning of institutional accompaniment . 2016 2016-12-27T10:48:04Z 2016-12-27T10:48:04Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/78522 en Open Access 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. Presented at: Tropentag 2016: Solidarity in a competing world - fair use of resources. Vienna (Austria) Sep 18-21. 4 p.
spellingShingle community forestry
genetic resources
forests
tenure
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
tenure
nongovernmental organisations
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/78522
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