110 likes | 198 Views
Discover the Poverty-Forests Linkages Toolkit by PROFOR, aiming to reduce poverty by integrating forests in sustainable development and protecting global forest values. Explore case studies and tools such as Wealth Ranking, Local Landscape Analysis, Timeline Trends, and more. Learn how to assess forest reliance and suggest solutions for sustainable forestry practices.
E N D
PROFOR – Program on Forests Poverty-Forests Linkages Toolkit Dr Mirjam A.F. Ros-Tonen
What are we going to do? • General introduction to PROFOR and poverty-forest linkages toolkit (MR) • Experience with the PROFOR toolkit in Ghana (AB) • Learning by doing: application of part of the PROFOR toolkit in class • Q & A
What is PROFOR? • Multi-donor trust fund programme funded by DFID, FINNIDA, the Japanese International Forestry Cooperation Office, SDC and the German government • Initiated by UNDP in 1996, but housed at the World Bank since 2002
What is PROFOR aiming at? • Harnessing the potential of forests to reduce poverty • Integrating forests in sustainable economic development • Protecting global forest values
Why a Poverty-Forests Linkages Toolkit ? • 1.2 billion people rely on forests for some part of their livelihoods • But importance of forest products often overlooked in poverty reduction strategies due to lack of evidence • Toolkit to facilitate relevant data collection and analysis
Features • Developed based on case studies in Guinea, Indonesia, Laos, Nepal, Mexico and Tanzania • 8 components
Components (1) • Tool 1: Wealth Ranking Understand how poor households use and depend on forest resources • Tool 2: Local Landscape Situation Analysis Understand how villagers use local resources • Tool 3: Timeline and Trends Record changes in forest resources, agriculture, local livelihood strategies and income • Tool 4: Livelihoods Analysis Determine the cash and subsistence reliance on forests and the proportion of annual income from forests
Components (2) • Tool 5: Forests Problem and Solution Matrix Identify and rank forest problems (related to policy, regulation or tenure/access) and suggest solutions • Tool 6: Trees and Forest Products Importance Rank forest products by importance for cash or subsistence use • Tool 7: Millennium Development Goals Chart To show the contribution of forests to the achievement of the MDGs • Tool 8: Monetary Values To express the contribution of forestry in monetary terms
Example from Tool 4 Livelihood analysis in Ghana by Andy Bell