Social Forestry & CBNRM Unit 1: Rodriga G. Aguinsatan FRM Dept. Faculty Cfes-Cmu
Social Forestry & CBNRM Unit 1: Rodriga G. Aguinsatan FRM Dept. Faculty Cfes-Cmu
Social Forestry & CBNRM Unit 1: Rodriga G. Aguinsatan FRM Dept. Faculty Cfes-Cmu
Unit 1
Rodriga G. Aguinsatan
FRM Dept. Faculty
CFES-CMU
Introduction
SF - Any situation which intimately involves local people in a forest activity and/or
a set of interconnected actions and works executed primarily by local community
residents to improve their own welfare .
It includes: a) the use of forests by individuals or households for subsistence and
cash, and b) community management of forest where a group of local people
collaboratively manage forests either independently or with external support.
- relates to a group of forest management strategies in which the aspect of local
participation with equitable distribution of forest products as the central
objective;
- mgt of forests for the benefits of local communities. It includes aspects such as
forest management, forest protection, & reforestation of deforested lands w/
the objective of improving the rural, environmental, & social dev’t.
What is Social Forestry?
SF - Weirsum (1984) has referred Social Forestry, "to all professional forestry activities that aim
specifically at the participation of local people in forest management and at the fulfilment of
the forest related needs and aspirations of these people”
Foley and Bernard, (1984) called Social Forestry as, "Farm-forestry and community - forestry"
and stated its aim as "to help to solve their own wood supply problems, meet their own needs,
and preserve the environment in which they live by planting trees on their farms and around
their villages.“
Hadley, (1988) has viewed that "Social Forestry as an "Extension-Forestry" which is an
informal, needs oriented educational process, carried out through individual and small group
communications, and characterized by audience participation.“
Vergara has summarized the characteristics of Social Forestry as follows: "Social Forestry is a
small-scale land use operation ranging from pure forestry to integrated agroforestry, and
planned and implemented by individual farmers or communities to yield products and services
for their primary use and benefits. The land use of Social Forestry Programmes could be sole-
owned, community-or-class-owned or Government controlled but made accessible to farmers
What is Social Forestry?
d. Contractual Program
d.1 Participatory Forestry
d.2 Village Forestry
d.3 Communal Forestry
d.4 Farmer’s Forestry
Implicit in their formulation of a cost-benefitanalysis framework for Social
Forestry, Srivastava and Pant
(1979) also provided the following classified schemes.
i) Farm Forestry,
ii) Rural or Extension Forestry, and
iii) Urban Forestry.
COMMUNITY FORESTRY and COMMUNITY-BASED
NATURAL RESOURCES MGT
Community Forestry – the process of making an effectuating decisions with
regard to the use and conservation of resources within the local territory with
the organization of related activities being based on social interactions and a
degree of shared norms and interest of the members living within this local
territory.
- any forest management activities undertaken by rural people as part of their
livelihood strategies.
- any situation which closely involves local people in a forestry activity
COMMUNITY FORESTRY and COMMUNITY-BASED
NATURAL RESOURCES MGT
Community-based Natural Resource Management (CBNRM) is a people-
centered approach to the integration of conservation of the natural resource
base (water, soil, trees and local biodiversity) and development to overcome
poverty, hunger and disease.
- refers to all types of natural resources management programs which
primarily involve community in all aspect of the program development in all
management processes (Rebugio 2003)
- envisions sustainable communities within healthy ecosystems.
- characterized by public, multiplicity of stakeholders with diverse interest
(forest production, critical watershed, protected areas or coastal areas mgt &
dev’t).
TYPES OF COMMUNITY FOREST MGT
• 1995 EO 263 “Adoption CBFM as the National Strategy for the Sustainable
Dev’t of Forestlands” was issued
- CBFM is the national strategy to achieve sustainable forestry and social
justice. Organized communities may be granted access to forest resources
under long-term tenure provided they employ environment-friendly,
ecologically sustainable, and labor-intensive harvesting methods. CBFM
integrates all people-oriented forestry programs & projects of the govt.
For the details: see DAO 2004-29
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