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The book examines reform in forest management policy in India and Nepal, in particular focussing on the three major Indian states of Orissa, West Bengal and Andhra Pradesh and the mid-hills and plains or Tarai area of Nepal
. Much policy debate revolves on the role of local people in forest management. ?Participatory forest management? or PFM refers to any policy that claims to be participatory and some of the concluding chapters examine the purposes of participation in various contexts. Many claims to ?participation? are made for many different reasons, whether by policy-makers, activists, politicians, funding agencies, forest users - who range from landless tribal people to village elites.
Forests, people and power: The political ecology of reform in South Asia, edited by Oliver Springate-Baginski and Piers Blaiki
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Section 1, deals with the complexities inherent in governing protected areas (PAs) - the richness of traditions and experiences but also the wisdom, flexibility, ingenuity and sense of fairness required to understand and deal with, matters that impact upon biological wealth, nature’s support to life and cultural values
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Section 2 includes distilled debates, often with a regional or sub-regional perspective. Thus the reports from large meetings in Africa and Central America and from legal decisions in Australia bring forward the essence of long-term processes, nourished by many people and organisations.
Individual case examples of community conserved areas and co-managed protected areas are included in Section 3
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