Logging Concessions and Local Livelihoods in Cameroon: from Indifference to Alliance?

Sustainable forest management gives the opportunity to better integrate the way local populations use their customary "village terroirs" in the logging activities. This requirement is explicitly stated in all forest laws of the Congo Basin countries but its implementation on the field rema...

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Main Authors: Guillaume Lescuyer, Samuel Assembe Mvondo, Julienne Nadège Essoungou, Vincent Toison, Jean-François Trébuchon, Nicolas Fauvet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2012-03-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss1/art7/
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spelling doaj-866eefed318548de917c4ccb85578bf12020-11-24T21:04:21ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872012-03-01171710.5751/ES-04507-1701074507Logging Concessions and Local Livelihoods in Cameroon: from Indifference to Alliance?Guillaume Lescuyer0Samuel Assembe Mvondo1Julienne Nadège Essoungou2Vincent Toison3Jean-François Trébuchon4Nicolas Fauvet5CIRADCIFORCIFORAgence des Aires Marines ProtégéesCIRADCIRADSustainable forest management gives the opportunity to better integrate the way local populations use their customary "village terroirs" in the logging activities. This requirement is explicitly stated in all forest laws of the Congo Basin countries but its implementation on the field remains under documented. In Cameroon, 30 forest management plans (FMP) for logging concessions have been reviewed to assess how they effectively include customary use rights. The integration of use rights into the FMPs is heterogeneous but always with very low enforcement. The weak influence of the FMP application on local practices is confirmed with an empirical survey that shows that natural, financial, and physical capitals in two villages of the eastern region of Cameroon have been little affected by the adjoining logging concession over the latest 13 years. Extrasector policies such as agriculture, road infrastructure, techniques, and land tenure are the real drivers of socioeconomic change at the local scale. Their impacts are facilitated by the presence of the logging concessions, which can contribute indirectly to improve local livelihoods.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss1/art7/Central Africacustomary rightssocioeconomic impactssustainable forest management
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Guillaume Lescuyer
Samuel Assembe Mvondo
Julienne Nadège Essoungou
Vincent Toison
Jean-François Trébuchon
Nicolas Fauvet
spellingShingle Guillaume Lescuyer
Samuel Assembe Mvondo
Julienne Nadège Essoungou
Vincent Toison
Jean-François Trébuchon
Nicolas Fauvet
Logging Concessions and Local Livelihoods in Cameroon: from Indifference to Alliance?
Ecology and Society
Central Africa
customary rights
socioeconomic impacts
sustainable forest management
author_facet Guillaume Lescuyer
Samuel Assembe Mvondo
Julienne Nadège Essoungou
Vincent Toison
Jean-François Trébuchon
Nicolas Fauvet
author_sort Guillaume Lescuyer
title Logging Concessions and Local Livelihoods in Cameroon: from Indifference to Alliance?
title_short Logging Concessions and Local Livelihoods in Cameroon: from Indifference to Alliance?
title_full Logging Concessions and Local Livelihoods in Cameroon: from Indifference to Alliance?
title_fullStr Logging Concessions and Local Livelihoods in Cameroon: from Indifference to Alliance?
title_full_unstemmed Logging Concessions and Local Livelihoods in Cameroon: from Indifference to Alliance?
title_sort logging concessions and local livelihoods in cameroon: from indifference to alliance?
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2012-03-01
description Sustainable forest management gives the opportunity to better integrate the way local populations use their customary "village terroirs" in the logging activities. This requirement is explicitly stated in all forest laws of the Congo Basin countries but its implementation on the field remains under documented. In Cameroon, 30 forest management plans (FMP) for logging concessions have been reviewed to assess how they effectively include customary use rights. The integration of use rights into the FMPs is heterogeneous but always with very low enforcement. The weak influence of the FMP application on local practices is confirmed with an empirical survey that shows that natural, financial, and physical capitals in two villages of the eastern region of Cameroon have been little affected by the adjoining logging concession over the latest 13 years. Extrasector policies such as agriculture, road infrastructure, techniques, and land tenure are the real drivers of socioeconomic change at the local scale. Their impacts are facilitated by the presence of the logging concessions, which can contribute indirectly to improve local livelihoods.
topic Central Africa
customary rights
socioeconomic impacts
sustainable forest management
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss1/art7/
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