NGOs come and go but business continues: lessons from co-management institutional arrangements for governance of the Arabuko-Sokoke Forest Reserve in Kenya

被引:2
作者
Ming'ate, Felix Lamech Mogambi [1 ]
Rennie, Hamish G. [2 ]
Memon, Ali [3 ]
机构
[1] Kenyatta Univ, Dept Environm Studies Community Dev, Nairobi, Kenya
[2] Lincoln Univ, DEM, Christchurch, New Zealand
[3] Auckland Council, Res Invest & Monitoring Unit, Auckland 1142, New Zealand
关键词
co-management; institutional arrangement; forest-dependent communities; Arabuko-Sokoke; Kenya; livelihoods; MANAGEMENT;
D O I
10.1080/13504509.2014.968237
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The objective of this paper is to examine the current institutional arrangements for governance of the Arabuko-Sokoke Forest Reserve (ASFR) and show their major contribution in the ASFR co-management business of conserving the forest and providing livelihoods to the poor forest-dependent communities. Despite the fact that funding from non-governmental organizations ended, the ASFR co-management business did not stall. The institutional arrangements for co-management were deemed to be the major component that contributed to the continuation of the ASFR co-management business. To demonstrate this hypothesis, the paper explores four main areas that shape the institutional arrangement of the ASFR co-management regime, informed by common property theories: (1) how governance arrangement structures for the ASFR are organized; (2) villagers' perceptions and awareness of the co-management structure; (3) co-management arrangement for access, ownership and use of the various forest resources; and (4) importance of the forest resources to the households. The co-management piloting and non-piloting communities adjacent to the forest and who have been depending on the forest as a source of their livelihoods are compared in order to understand the role of the ASFR co-management institutional arrangements in the sustainability of its business.
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页码:526 / 531
页数:6
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