1 / 27

Sustainable Development and Community Forestry in Mexico

Sustainable Development and Community Forestry in Mexico. Community Based Natural Resource Management CBNRM or CBRM. Community Forestry Basic issues: Failure of market driven mechanisms to promote “sustainable and equitable natural resource management in the developing world”

lareina
Download Presentation

Sustainable Development and Community Forestry in Mexico

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sustainable Development and Community Forestry in Mexico

  2. Community Based Natural Resource ManagementCBNRM or CBRM • Community Forestry • Basic issues: • Failure of market driven mechanisms to promote “sustainable and equitable natural resource management in the developing world” • Search for alternatives • Deals with BOTH deforestation and poverty/social justice

  3. Rationale for CBNRM • Rural people are strategic, rational actors who are • closer to the resource, • have traditional knowledge about the resource • Have values that would tend to preserve it • greater incentive to manage it properly because their livelihoods depend on it • Better managers than the state or distant corporations

  4. Why is Community Forestry in Mexico important?* • “Two Mexico’s” • Rural livelihoods: Rural Development is an alternative strategy to stem migration to cities, Maquiladoras, or US • Preserve land rights: political empowerment • Cultural traditions • Promote better balance of trade? • Internal production of lumber instead of import • Small factories produce value added products from woodworking instead of export lumber *Dr. Dan Klooster

  5. Wood Products Exports and Imports--2001 • Imports: $2,034,272,000 • Exports: $185,851,008

  6. Why is Community Forestry in Mexico important-ecological bennies • Stems deforestation • ¼ size pre-colonization • High rate of deforestation: -1.5%/year • Options expanded for ecotourism • Promotes theecological benefits of forest • Maintains biodiversity • Carbon sinkhelps mitigate global warming • stabilize hydrological cycles, maintain the flow and purity of local water sources • reduce erosion, slow the siltation of reservoirs and waterways, • protect the watersheds of irrigation districts and urban centers. • support agriculture • sites for recreation

  7. Land area Forest Cover 2000 Forest Cover Change 1990-2000 ´000 ha ´000 ha ´000 ha/year %/ year Forest Mexico 190,869 55,205 -631 -1.08 28.9 North and Central America 2,102,742 549,306 -570 -.10 26.1 World 13,139,618 3,869,453 -9,319 -.24 29.4 Deforestation in Mexico

  8. Mexico Forestry Unique • “the most advanced community forestry sector in Latin America” • Unlike most LA countries (where forests are state owned) Mexico’s forests are in traditional community ownership: case study example for other Latin American and developing countries. • At the same time, community based forest policies are incipient and endangered by state and international economic policies • forest development has not yet assuaged poverty or environmental conservation

  9. Community Foresters

  10. Historical background1500-1900 • Spanish conquest: dispossession of land • 19th C: liberalism emerges: more dispossession • Porfiriato: intensified dispossession/extreme inequality of development • Mexican Revolution: primary cause was land distribution

  11. Post Revolution: President Cardenas: Three trends 1934-1940 • Land redistribution to peasants: EJIDOS • 18 million hectares (45 million acres)—800,000 recipients • Ejido share of cultivated land: 15% in 1930 47% by 1940 • Forest lands: 1.5 % in 1930 18% in 1940 • However, land reform did not touch holdings of foreign and national logging companies • “rentismo” • Conservation “professionalized” in gov bureaucracy • “Scientific” management of the forests • END RESULT: Nobody followed it, but evasion was worse than managed development

  12. Mixed messages: 1949-1980 • Land re-distribution expanded. By 1980, 500 ejidos/communities own 65% of the forest but they are forbidden to utilize the forest • ISI Forestry /“Productionism” 1949-1958: Concessions to big integrated forestry firms • Conservation pressures • Even in community forests, parastatal and private logging firms log with impunity, peasants are policed • Inequalities breed rural unrest • Roots of Zapatista movement and other guerrilla groups

  13. The Rise of Community Forestry • As early as 1960: supporters envision production with conservation “sustainable development” • Late 1970’s: Concessions set to expire: communities organize regionally to exert pressure on President de la Madrid “we will no longer permit our natural resources to be wasted, since they are the patrimony of our children” • 1986 forestry law: rescinded concessions, recognized rights of community ownership

  14. Percent of Timber from Community Managed Forests Commercial Timber Milled Timber 1976 2-3 Na 1980 17 Na 1992 40 15 Source: Klooster. 2003

  15. Social and Environmental impacts of forest management • Michoacan community: logging, sawmill, furniture factory • Oaxaca: 95 communities • Quintana Roo • Benefits not limited to exceptionally well managed communities

  16. Community Forestry under Neoliberal Reforms: • Neoliberalization under IMF restructuring • 1992 Forestry Act: modifications to Article 27privatization: • Land may be sold, but is not required to be sold • devolution of control to the communities • but neglect of support • State support for Pulpwood Plantations: PRODEPLAN • Investment subsidies and incentives • Investment Inequalities: peasants perceive unprepared ness and unwillingness to risk land/HOME • stagnation

  17. Response to Problems of Neoliberalism • Unique combination of various political and social factors • Unprecedented and vigorous debate about forestry in Mexico during 1990’s • Movement of social reformers into gov. forestry • Growing vulnerability of PRI • Zapatistas? • 1997 Forestry Plan: PRODEFOR • “building communities' managerial capacity for forestry through training in administration and forest management, participatory rural appraisals, and workshops in which successful forestry communities share their knowledge with less experienced forestry communities”

  18. Forest Ownership in Mexico Ejido and Comm. Agrarias (8000-9000) 70-80% Small Properties, 15-20 hectares 15-20% Protected Areas/Parks 5-10% Mexican Forests, 2003

  19. Fox Administration • Comisión Nacional Forestal • 2x funding for commercial plantations • Neoliberalism favors TNCs, not forest owning villages • New international issue: protection of Monarch butterfly breeding grounds

  20. Tania Murray Li: critique of CBNRM in the Philippines/Indonesia • Community, participation, empowerment and sustainability widely used discourses • Reality: Applications of these terms vary widely and with wide degrees of success • Furthermore, internal inequalities in benefits still remain • Class • Gender

  21. Tania Murray Li: Philippines/Indonesia • CBNRM externally defines options: • “while some people would benefit from CBNRM provisions, others would find themselves re-assigned to a marginal economic niche that corresponds poorly to the futures they imagine for themselves”

  22. Tania Murray Li: Philippines/Indonesia • Need to explore the role of the state and power structures in using CBNRM for greater control. • “CBNRM, rather than rolling back the state and reducing official interference in local affairs, is a vehicle for realigning the relationship between the state and upland citizens. Contrary to the goal of its proponents, there is increasing evidence that CBNRM has the effect of intensifying state control over upland resources, lives and livelihoods. For this reason, some upland citizens may resist programs promoted in the name of CBNRM. For others, better integration into the legal and administrative systems of the state is a desirable outcome.”

  23. Tania Murray Li: Philippines/Indonesia • Important to consider CBNRM as a channel into improving peasants power within state political/economic structures. • “The CBNRM simplification that assumes an inherent separation between community and state, and posits community as a natural entity outside and/or opposed to state processes, fits poorly with the historical and contemporary processes of state and community formation in Southeast Asia's upland regions.”

  24. Final note on forests • Over 90% of the 1.2 billion people living in extreme poverty depend on forests for some part of their livelihoods.

More Related