Democratic Decentralisation through a Natural Resource Lens

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accountability
Category=JPHV
Category=QDTS
center
Central Government
CFA Franc
Civil Society
Community Forest Management Committees
comparative decentralisation case studies
decentralised
Decentralised Forest Management
Decentralised Natural Resource Management
Democratic Decentralisation
downward
Downward Accountability
environmental governance
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
forest
Forest Management
forestry
Forestry Fees
international
Khot Ail
land tenure systems
LDC Government
local resource management
management
Non-timber Forest Products
Panchayati Raj
participatory policy
pasture
Pasture Land Management
Public Attorney's Office
research
rural livelihoods analysis
Small Scale Logging
Stakeholder Committees
Sustainable NRM Practice
Tierras Comunitarias De Origen
traditional authority structures
User Committees
VIP Visit
Watershed Committees
Watershed Mission
Wild Coast SDI

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415347860
  • Weight: 660g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Dec 2004
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This volume queries the state and effect of the global decentralization movement through the study of natural resource decentralizations in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The case studies presented here use a comparative framework to characterize the degree to which natural resource decentralizations can be said to be taking place and, where possible, to measure their social and environmental consequences. In general, the cases show that threats to national-level interests are producing resistance that is fettering the struggle for reform.

Jesse C. Ribot is a Senior Associate in the Institutions and Governance Program at the World Resources Institute (WRI). He currently directs WRI's Africa Decentralization and Environment Initiative. He has conducted research on environmental justice, social vulnerability in the face of climate change, the social structure of resource access, and the effects of rural-urban resource markets on local livelihoods. Ribot has also worked on local environmental governance issues with the World Bank, the United Nations Capital Development Fund, the Dutch Government and USAID, and has advised governments across Africa.

Anne M. Larson is a Research Associate of the Center for International Forestry Research, Bogor, Indonesia, and the Nitlapán Institute for Research and Development of the Central American University in Managua, Nicaragua. She has published articles in World Development and Public Administration and Development, as well as a book on local forest management in Nicaragua in Spanish, and worked extensively on the recently-published book Municipal Forest Management in Latin America (ed. Ferroukhi, 2003).