Does forest tenure influence forest vegetation characteristics? A comparative analysis of private, local and central government forest reserves in central Uganda

2010 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 320-338 ◽  
Author(s):  
N Turyahabwe ◽  
M Tweheyo
2016 ◽  
Vol 35 (67) ◽  
pp. 253-279
Author(s):  
Ligia Alba Melo-Becerra

This article presents a comparative analysis of the optimal fiscal response to shocks in the sub-national public sector in cooperative and non-cooperative models. The analysis is undertaken by comparing models that assume idiosyncratic demandside shocks and sub-national autonomy to collect taxes, with models that assume that the central government collects the taxes of the whole country and redistributes them across regions. Results show that under symmetrical conditions, the non-cooperative solution may result in greater stabilization and lower sub-national public expenditure than the cooperative solution. However, if regional asymmetries are introduced into the model, results may be reversed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sindhu P. Dhungana ◽  
Poshendra Satyal ◽  
Nagendra P. Yadav ◽  
Bhola Bhattarai

 Collaborative forest management (CFM) is a ‘community-based’ forest tenure regime that works in partnership between the central government, local government and local forest user groups in Nepal’s Terai, particularly in the management of large, contiguous forests. It has been in practice since the early 2000s in the form of ‘pilot initiatives’ and is gradually receiving greater legal attention. Through our own experiences, available literature and review of policies, we document the evolutionary history of Terai forest and CFM’s current issues. We found that the management aspects of Terai forests have been weak throughout its history. We also found a number of issues and challenges in the implementation of CFM. Some of the prominent issues include ambiguity in tenure rights and security, lack of appropriate and uncontested policy provisions for cost and benefit sharing among collaborators, limited decision-making space for forest-managing communities and local governments, and limited capacity of collaborators for the productive management of forests. We suggest tenure reform in terms of legal, institutional, technical and financial arrangements, so as to make CFM an effective forest management model in the Terai.


2013 ◽  
Vol 79 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-48 ◽  
Author(s):  
Morten Balle Hansen ◽  
Trui Steen ◽  
Marsha de Jong

In this article we are interested in how the coordinating role of top civil servants is related to the argument that country-level differences in the adoption of New Public Management significantly alter the Public Service Bargains of top civil servants and consequently their capacity to accomplish interdepartmental coordination. A managerial PSB limits top civil servants’ role in interdepartmental coordination, as their focus will be on achieving goals set for their specific departments, rather than for the central government as a collective. We test our argument with empirical insights from a comparative analysis of five countries: Belgium, Canada, Denmark, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. We find that our argument is only partly valid and discuss the theoretical and empirical implications of the analysis. Points for practitioners Alongside the introduction of New Public Management, the relationships between ministers and their top civil servants in state administration have evolved. At the same time, societal issues are getting more complex and demand a holistic, cross-sector approach. The concept of a managerial Public Service Bargain is used to analyze changes in top civil servants’ role and the impact of reforms on the capacity of top civil servants to accomplish interdepartmental coordination. Practitioners can learn more about the close link between challenges for interdepartmental coordination and changes in the role and functioning of top civil servants.


2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (8) ◽  
pp. 37-48
Author(s):  
Oleksandr Kuczabski ◽  
Krzysztof Kopec

The features of decommunization on the example of the toponymic policy of Ukraine and Poland are explored in the article. The “last” wave of decommunization of the city toponymics, which began in 2014 and peaked in 2015–2017, was the object of interest. 14 Ukrainian and Polish cities were selected for comparative research. The study covered all decommunization legal acts in selected cities. 451 urbanonims were analyzed, the vast majority of which were decommunizated in Ukraine (89%). Polish cities accounted for 11% of the total renamed amount, respectively.The content-statistical analysis made it possible to determine the scale of urbanonymy changes, the recurrence of old and new urbanonymy in the sample under study. The classification of old and new names has been carried out in terms of persons, events, or other objects and phenomena. As a result, objective information was obtained to assess the scale, intensity, and territorial characteristics of urban changes in both states. It has been established that, although in general toponymic decommunization was supported and understood in both states by a significant part of society, it caused certain ideological, political, organizational, and competence contradictions. Decommunization toponymic policy in Ukraine and Poland has not only common but also distinctive features. In particular, the renaming in Ukraine turned out to be several times larger than the Polish one. Along with the signs of decommunization, it also bore signs of de-Russification of symbolic space. Decommunized names in Ukraine turned out to be, on the whole, more neutral, compromise and de-ideologized. It was revealed that, unlike the Ukrainian one, the Polish judicial system often defended local self-government bodies from attempts by the central government under the guise of decommunization to interfere in local urbanonymy politics.


2020 ◽  
pp. 3-23
Author(s):  
Yu. A. Semenishchenkov ◽  
R. S. Korsikov

The results of the comparative analysis of traditional forest typology data and the data of floristic classification by the J. Braun-Blanquet approach for large-scale mapping of forest vegetation from the Southern Nechernozemye of Russia are presented. 3 model forest areas located in the forestries in borders of different botanic-geographical districts with specific climatic and edaphic conditions have been chosen to make the comparative analysis of cartographic materials (Bryansk and Smolensk Regions). A comparison of existing afforestation plans and created geobotanical maps demonstrates the difference in the number of recognized typological units. In all cases, a smaller number of units are noted for the geobotanical maps with a scale 1 : 25 000. A decrease in the number of typological units can be explain by the lack of information on the age of tree stands. Another reason is, probably, the assignment of some forest stands with the predominance of different indigenous species to a single association. However, the same typological units, distinguished by the predominance of tree species, may correspond to different units of floristic classification, which may increase the number of typological units on the geobotanical map. Some features of the Braun-Blanquet approach such as the allocation of units, primarily based on a comparison of the floristic composition of plant communities, allows attributing both natural stands and forest cultures to a single syntaxon. This also reduces the number of typological units on the geobotanical map. The plans of afforestation show the present-day species composition and the age of the studied stands, but the dynamic interrelations of forest communities are not reflected there. Therefore, it is more effective to reflect the dynamics of vegetation of forest communities in accordance with the methodology adopted when creating geobotanical maps. In this case, the succession state of communities and their links to classification units of higher ranks has been taken into account by the allocation of temporary facies with the predominance of small-leaved species at the site of indigenous broad-leaved or coniferous forests. The deductive approach with the identification of non-rank «communities» also makes it possible to separate into separate syntaxa and time-unstable, unformed or poorly floristic communities. Typically, such forests are formed by coniferous cultures in the zone of deciduous forests. The unformed «semi-forest» communities in the lowland swamps are also placed into the same category. They are often formed after felling, initiating or intensifying bogging under conditions of fluctuating moisture. The use of a single colorimetric scheme for forest stands in different climatic and edaphic conditions, reflected in the TLU (forest conditions) system, can be considered not quite correct. Stands with the predominance of the same species can correspond to different zonal-conditioned TLUs. At the same time, communities of some syntaxomomical taxa of floristic classification can be formed in different TLUs and their diversity corresponds to the width of the ecological amplitude of the types of plant communities. The more stenotopic communities, the smaller number of TLUs corresponding to their habitats. The afforestation plans and geobotanical maps can be used by different ways in forestry. The traditional afforestation plans are widely used in forestry planning. However, the geobotanical map supplemented with information on the dynamic relationships of stands allows making more efficient prediction of scenarios of forest stand development under known forest conditions. In addition, cartographic materials on the proposed geobotanical basis reflect the general botanical and geographical trends of vegetation, and the syntaxa of the floristic classification always have a certain chorological content, thus, they can be used as zonal-climatic indicators. This feature is reflected in their compliance with TLU, which are specifically distinguished for different natural zones.


1963 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 307-323 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. Jordan

A short history of the study of the six tsetse species of the group of Glossina fusca (Wlk.) that occur in Nigeria and the former British Southern Cameroons (now West Cameroun, part of the Federal Republic of Cameroun) is given. Extensive collections of these species were not made until after the scheme for the establishment of the West African Institute for Trypanosomiasis Research was initiated in 1947. More intensive studies, stimulated by the discovery of a technique of searching for the flies in their resting sites, were carried out in southern Nigeria, at the W.A.I.T.R. Field Station and elsewhere, from 1953 onwards.The situation, climate and vegetation zones of Nigeria are described. Species of the fusca group occur only in the southern part of Nigeria and in West Cameroun and depend on some type of forest vegetation, ranging from relatively dry forest islands and riverine forest in savannah to dense, humid, wet rain forest, for their habitat. Rainfall and relative humidity, in general, decrease with increasing distance from the coast and are factors of great importance in determining the distribution of the fusca group.Locality records for each species of the fusca group are listed according to the Province and nearest town or village to the place where they were collected, and the results are shown on maps. G. medicorum Aust. has only been recorded from the relatively dry northern part of the rain forest and forest islands or riverine forest in savannah in Western Nigeria. G. nashi Potts occurs in dense, wet rain forest in West Cameroun. G. tabaniformis Westw. occurs, especially, in forest reserves in Ondo and Benin Provinces of Western Nigeria and in wet rain forest in West Cameroun and adjoining forest country in Eastern Nigeria. G. haningtoni Newst. & Evans is common in wet rain forest in West Cameroun and there are also records 175 miles to the west in Delta Province of Western Nigeria. G. fusca occurs in a wider range of climatic conditions and habitat types than the other species; it has been recorded in vegetation varying from forest islands in savannah to wet rain forest. G. nigrofusca Newst. is a rare but widespread species in Nigeria and West Cameroun where it occurs typically in wet rain forest.The dry and wet limits (indicated by mean annual rainfall) of the distribution of each species in Nigeria and West Cameroun are given, and the importance of climate, especially humidity, in determining these distributions is discussed. The climatic requirements of the six species are confirmed by their distribution outside the boundaries of Nigeria and West Cameroun. G. medicorum extends mainly to the west of Nigeria although there are also two records of the species from Gabon, widely separated from the main area of distribution of the species in West Africa. G. haningtoni and G. nashi, species typical of Central Africa (as here defined), extend only to the east and south of Nigeria (south in the sense of south of the latitude of Nigeria in territories in Central Africa). The remaining three species, those which occur in both reasonably dry and reasonably wet forest conditions in Nigeria and West Cameroun, extend both west and east and south of Nigeria and West Cameroun.Some type of thicket or forest vegetation is the essential habitat for the survival of all six species of the fusca group. The main areas inhabited by the fusca group now are forest reserves in Western Nigeria and the relatively undisturbed forests of West Cameroun. The species are absent from much of southern Nigeria, and it seems certain that the increase of the human population over relatively recent times, and the effects that this increased density of population has had on the flora and fauna, has been the cause of the present-day discontinuous distribution of the fusca group in southern Nigeria. Man has an adverse effect on fusca-group tsetse populations through clearing of forest vegetation and the hunting and driving away of the game animals on which the flies depend for food. An inverse relationship between human population density and the number of records of the fusca group over southern Nigeria and West Cameroun is demonstrated.


2003 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 19-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Clare

This paper reviews the introduction of the UK Looking After Children practice and management materials in a number of Australian States and Territories against the background of a comparative analysis of UK central government systems to prescribe standards of service and to monitor outcomes for children in care. The writer argues that the UK Labour government commitment to a ‘whole of government’ interventionist set of activities and processes is significantly more successful in driving child welfare initiatives than the more fragmented and secretive systems in Australian States. Finally, the writer reflects on the central influence of commissioned research in informing needs and service outcomes for vulnerable children and their families.


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