What is community-based forestry and why
should I take a
course on it?
Dr. Wangari Maathai
won the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize for “her contribution to sustainable
development, democracy and peace.” While
she is accomplished in many areas, this award honors her for founding
the Green Belt Movement which, over the course of 30 years, has
mobilized poor
women to plant 30 million trees in her native
These words describe the goals and methods of community-based forestry worldwide. Community-based forestry promoters seek nothing less than to secure social and ecological well-being for all by working to enhance participatory decision-making and sustainable benefits at a local level which are equitably distributed.
In this course, community-based forestry is
studied as a
robust example of how sustainability can be achieved through
institutional
change. It is often said that forest
management is not about managing forests, but rather about managing
people. This course will focus on the
people,
policies and institutions which dictate the use of forest resources. It is fundamentally a policy course which examines how people at the community
level are working to co-manage forests for sustainable social &
environmental benefits. We will also
examine the national level policy changes (laws) that have been
developed and
implemented to reallocate the distribution of responsibility and
benefits
associated with forest management. We
will examine cases from
(*Quotes
from the official press release of the Nobel Prize
Committee. See www. nobelprize.com)