Carbon forestry and local livelihoods : a case study on poverty in Uganda

Green Resources is one of the largest companies engaged in carbon forestry on the African continent. The Green Resources carbon forestry plantation in northern Uganda is a particularly interesting case in a Swedish perspective, because the Swedish Energy Agency is committed to buying its carbon emis...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Ellingsen, Tove
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development 2017
Materias:
_version_ 1855571721551085568
author Ellingsen, Tove
author_browse Ellingsen, Tove
author_facet Ellingsen, Tove
author_sort Ellingsen, Tove
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Green Resources is one of the largest companies engaged in carbon forestry on the African continent. The Green Resources carbon forestry plantation in northern Uganda is a particularly interesting case in a Swedish perspective, because the Swedish Energy Agency is committed to buying its carbon emissions reductions within a clean development mechanism (CDM) project under the Kyoto protocol. This thesis examined how wealth is perceived and experienced by the villagers in the area surrounding the Green Resources plantation, and how different wealth groups perceive and have been affected by Green Resources interventions associated with the plantation. The analysis was performed using the sustainable livelihoods approach (SLA), which presents the main factors that affect people’s livelihoods and typical relationships between these. A qualitative approach was used, based on face-to-face interviews, focus group interviews, observations, wealth ranking, community mapping and a review of the literature. The thesis also examined whether the capitals concept from SLA can be applied to explain the livelihood effects of the plantation. The forms of capital considered were human, financial, natural, social and physical capital. Within these, there are different assets to which people have varying degrees of access, depending on the wealth group to which they belong. The findings revealed exclusion of the poorest from development activities in villages neighbouring the Green Resources plantation. A key reason found for this was that Green Resources operate without taking into consideration the different wealth groups among the villagers, and without a strategy for how it could reach out to the poorest regarding its commitment to poverty alleviation.
format H2
id RepoSLU10618
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2017
publishDateSort 2017
publisher SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development
publisherStr SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development
record_format eprints
spelling RepoSLU106182017-08-18T08:52:16Z Carbon forestry and local livelihoods : a case study on poverty in Uganda Ellingsen, Tove local livelihoods capitals Uganda villagers perception Green Resources is one of the largest companies engaged in carbon forestry on the African continent. The Green Resources carbon forestry plantation in northern Uganda is a particularly interesting case in a Swedish perspective, because the Swedish Energy Agency is committed to buying its carbon emissions reductions within a clean development mechanism (CDM) project under the Kyoto protocol. This thesis examined how wealth is perceived and experienced by the villagers in the area surrounding the Green Resources plantation, and how different wealth groups perceive and have been affected by Green Resources interventions associated with the plantation. The analysis was performed using the sustainable livelihoods approach (SLA), which presents the main factors that affect people’s livelihoods and typical relationships between these. A qualitative approach was used, based on face-to-face interviews, focus group interviews, observations, wealth ranking, community mapping and a review of the literature. The thesis also examined whether the capitals concept from SLA can be applied to explain the livelihood effects of the plantation. The forms of capital considered were human, financial, natural, social and physical capital. Within these, there are different assets to which people have varying degrees of access, depending on the wealth group to which they belong. The findings revealed exclusion of the poorest from development activities in villages neighbouring the Green Resources plantation. A key reason found for this was that Green Resources operate without taking into consideration the different wealth groups among the villagers, and without a strategy for how it could reach out to the poorest regarding its commitment to poverty alleviation. SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development 2017 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/10618/
spellingShingle local livelihoods
capitals
Uganda
villagers
perception
Ellingsen, Tove
Carbon forestry and local livelihoods : a case study on poverty in Uganda
title Carbon forestry and local livelihoods : a case study on poverty in Uganda
title_full Carbon forestry and local livelihoods : a case study on poverty in Uganda
title_fullStr Carbon forestry and local livelihoods : a case study on poverty in Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Carbon forestry and local livelihoods : a case study on poverty in Uganda
title_short Carbon forestry and local livelihoods : a case study on poverty in Uganda
title_sort carbon forestry and local livelihoods : a case study on poverty in uganda
topic local livelihoods
capitals
Uganda
villagers
perception