scholarly journals Study on the Influential Factors of the Involvement of Local People in Participatory Forest Management: The Case of Wof-Washa District, Ethiopia

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Demissew Wondafrash Kura ◽  
Huajing Li ◽  
Di Shang

Participatory Forest Management (PFM) is crucial to the implementation of effective forest management and improvement in the living conditions of local communities. But local people involvement in PFM practice is affected by demographic, biophysical, institutional, and socio-economic factors. A cross-sectional survey research design was employed to collect information from 295 households (127 participants and 168 non-participants) by stratified sampling technique followed by a random sampling method. Both qualitative and quantitative data were collected from primary and secondary sources through structured interview schedules, Focused Group Discussion (FGD), Key Informant Interviews (KII) and field observation. The study employed both descriptive statistic and logistic regression model to compute the socio-economic characteristics and to identify influential factors that affect the community’s involvement in PFM practice respectively. The results of the logistic regression model revealed that household’s family size, educational status, training, benefits derived from the forest, and the number of livestock were positively affected local people’s participation in PFM activities, whereas the distance of the forest from household resident was negatively affected. Apart from demographic, biophysical, institutional, and socio-economic factors granting ownership right, improved awareness, fear of displaced from the forest area, fear of forest lose and moral obligation were enhancing factors while the expansion of agricultural land and settlement, illegal logging, weak punishment, the insufficient fund or lack of incentives, poor forest management trend, conflict of interest, and doubt on the continuity of PFM program were some influential factors that hinder local people’s participation in PFM activities. The study assisted policymakers to inform the influential factors that affect local people’s participation in the study area and formulate effective policy advice to promote PFM practice in the region. KEYWORDS: Participatory forest management; Influential factors; Household; Socio-economics; Wof-Washa District; Policy advice


Author(s):  
Dr.Antony J Kuttencherry ◽  
Dr.P Arunachalam

Tribal communities are mainly living nearby the forest areas and their life routine and activities are connected with the forest. Majority of the tribals depend upon forest for their livelihood. The tribals know the characteristic of forest and forest teaches the tribals how to live and move in forest. The 1988 National Forest Policy envisaged Joint Forest Management (JFM) also known as Community Forest Management (CFM), which means forest protection with the support of forest dependent communities. The participatory forestry management (PFM) defines the protection of the forest, manage the noon-wood resources with the support of local people and ensure the livelihood income for local people. The one of the aims of the participatory Forest Management (PFM) is the welfare of the tribals and build the livelihood mission among the tribals. Vana Samrakshana Samithi (VSS) is also known as village level body and it is functioning under the Participatory Forest Management (PFM). The people living nearby the forests are joined in Vana Samrakshana Samithi (VSS) and with their support, forest department manages various activities related to forest protection. The Vana Samrakshana Samithi (VSS) has a great role in improving environmental protection and the concept of eco-tourism. They get livelihood income and also social interaction trainings by the activities of VSS. The VSS activities have supported the tribals by ensuring the livelihood income and in social trainings. The involvement of the tribals through the VSS, makes them aware of the environmental protection, eco-tourism concept, and forest protection among the society. The paper attempts to study the role of tribal members of Vana Samrakshana Samithi (VSS), how to engage in environmental protection, forest protection and building the eco-tourism concept in Vazhachal waterfalls eco-tourism area in Thrissur District of Kerala. KEY WORDS: VSS, Eco-Tourism, Forest Protection, Environmental Protection and Tribals


2018 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 149-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khondokar H. Kabir ◽  
Andrea Knierim ◽  
Ataharul Chowdhury ◽  
Beatriz Herrera

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