Practices and Challenge to Participatory Forest Management in Ethiopia: The Case of Chilimo-Gaji Participatory Forest Management, West Shewa Zone, Oromiya National Regional State
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Date
2014-06
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Addis Ababa University
Abstract
Participatory Forest Management project initiated by Farm Africa in Dendi woreda was
operational since 1996 in Chilimo-Gaji forest. Currently the management responsibilities have
been transferred to the communities around the forest. The aims of this thesis are to investigate
the practices and challenges of participatory forest management and to investigate the roles
and interactions of different actors in the management process of the Chilimo-Gaji forest.
Three forest users’ cooperatives were selected for data collection. To collect the data
qualitative methods of data collection such as key informant interview, focus group discussion
and field observations techniques were employed. The qualitative data were transcribed,
categorized and indexed for analysis and interpretation. The results of the study showed that
resource attributes (e.g. forest block size, benefit sharing) and problems related to membership
accession as well as poor financial management have negatively affected participatory forest
management in the study area. Moreover, the forest user communities were found to have doubt and insecurity regarding the continuity of the program due to low level of government support and restrictions to traditional resource use rights. The management overlapped with stockholders and the coordination among the proponent actors in forest management process was found to be very limited. Furthermore, the actors’ net work with higher officials, their relatives and the power dynamics among the various actors have adverse impact on the forest management process. This violation of the communities’ bylaw, rules and regulations resulted in some forms of responses from the forest user communities. Especially ‘adaptation’ and ‘resistance’ approaches were used by the local communities to get access to forest resources.
Local communities often rent donkey and form network with authorities and relatives as a form
adaptation for accessing forest resources while. Various forms of passive and active
resistances were employed by the local communities in reactions to the communities’ bylaws
and access to forest resources, respectively. Thus any successful implementations of
participatory forest management should take into account the challenges of local communities’ livelihoods, proper mandates of institutions and actors’ dynamics and power interactions.
Key words: actors’ interactions, Chilimo-Gaji, community bylaw, forest user cooperatives,
participation, tenure insecurity
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Keywords
Actors Interactions, Chilimo-Gaji, Community Bylaw, Forest User Cooperatives, Participation Tenure Insecurity