Browsing by Autor "P. Cronkleton"
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Item type: Item , Assessing Local Knowledge of Game Abundance and Persistence of Hunting Livelihoods in the Bolivian Amazon Using Consensus Analysis(Springer Science+Business Media, 2010) Tracy Van Holt; Wendy R. Townsend; P. CronkletonItem type: Item , Damage to Brazil nut trees (Bertholletia excelsa) during selective timber harvesting in Northern Bolivia(Elsevier BV, 2009) Manuel R. Guariguata; Juan Carlos Licona; Bonifacio Mostacedo; P. CronkletonItem type: Item , Future scenarios as a tool for collaboration in forest communities(Institut Veolia Environnement, 2008) Kristen Evans; Wil de Jong; P. CronkletonForest devolution is meant to provide communities with greater decision-making power over the use and future of tropical forests. However, devolution policies have not always had the intended effect; in some cases they have caused or furthered the disenfranchisement of the poor, the creation of open access conditions, resource conflict and forest degradation. These problems are likely to arise when forest communities are at a disadvantage when interacting with other local players and are unprepared for their new opportunities and responsibilities due to their physical remoteness, cultural isolation, low literacy rates or lack of experience in formal planning and negotiation. This paper discusses how a participatory method to facilitate thinking about the future -called future scenarios -can help change the way forest communities and local governments interact. The paper reviews a growing body of literature on future scenarios and shares first-hand experiences with future scenarios in forest communities in the northern Bolivian Amazon and the central provinces of Vietnam. It finds that under the right conditions, the use of future scenarios allows forest communities to collaborate more effectively with local government, better assume responsibilities when given control over forests under devolution schemes and self-organize to benefit from the opportunities that communal control over forests offers. Future scenarios help communities think about dependency, vulnerabilities and ways to prepare for the future; the methods develop organizational capacity and encourage internal democratic processes and planning. Community leaders become more vocal and assertive in meetings with local government, and marginalized groups within communities, such as women or the poorest segments, make their voices heard. However, the methods are less effective when facilitation skills are not available or where government or other interests are threatened by local constituents. Future scenarios are not without their pitfalls and do not work in all situations, but given the appropriate context they can create "break-through moments" that improve collaboration between communities and local officials.Item type: Item , Influence of the Expert Effect on Cultural Models(Taylor & Francis, 2016) Tracy Van Holt; H. Russell Bernard; Susan C. Weller; Wendy R. Townsend; P. CronkletonWe examined hunters’ perceptions of fauna to see if expert hunters and other hunters perceive wildlife abundance similarly. We used cultural consensus analysis (CCA) to assess the knowledge of 25 hunters in the Bolivian Amazon about the abundance of 38 animals. CCA indicated highly shared beliefs among hunters concerning wildlife abundance (average agreement = .62). However, expert hunters (as judged by their reported successful hunts of rare species, having hunted recently, and consuming more game in their diet) perceived more animals as abundant than did non-experts, although they all shared the same model. Since the expert hunters did not always agree on which species was more abundant, they had low cultural knowledge scores in CCA results. These experts may be unwilling to curtail hunting efforts on key species that they perceive to be abundant.Item type: Item , Participatory Methods for Planning the Future in Forest Communities(Taylor & Francis, 2010) Kristen Evans; Wil de Jong; P. Cronkleton; Tran Huu NghiForest devolution and government decentralization have increased community control over forests. Remoteness, low literacy, and lack of formal planning experience often leave forest communities unprepared for their new responsibilities. Forest communities need to develop skills that allow them to establish goals and make decisions transparently and democratically and to negotiate effectively with other local actors if they are to become more proactive participants in local governance processes. In Bolivia and Vietnam we tested four adaptations of scenario-based methods to assist forest communities to develop these skills. This article reflects on the strengths, limitations, and new applications of these methods. The methods encourage participation by members who have little experience with structured planning, including the most marginalized: women, elderly, and illiterate participants. The methods are useful as planning tools, for generating records of decision-making processes, and for preparing for negotiations between communities and local governments.Item type: Item , Pobreza, descentralizacion y bosques en el norte amazonico boliviano(2005) Darryl Joi P. Fuentes; R. Haches; Rachel Maldonado; Albornoz M.A.; P. Cronkleton; de Jong W.; Mimi Larsen BeckerThis Spanish language book provides an overview of Bolivia's Amazonian department of Pando, its geography and the conditions faced by rural residents and local government. The book's six chapters provide detailed analysis of regional poverty and the government agencies and civil society actors responsible for poverty alleviation. Key topics include how Bolivia conceptualizes poverty, how data on poverty in the country are collected and reported, and how this information results in specific poverty reduction activities. The first three chapters provide a comprehensive overview of Bolivia's policies and legislation related to poverty reduction. Central to these are the Poverty Reduction Strategy and the National Dialogue Law that define the mechanisms that guide actions at the local level. The first three chapters form the introduction to a detailed analysis of poverty in the Amazon region of northern Bolivia, a region that relies largely on forestry production, and where CIFOR has been conducting social research since the mid 1990s. The book provides an excellent introduction to readers interested in poverty at the forest margins in Bolivia.Item type: Item , Resource Theft in Tropical Forest Communities: Implications for Non-timber Management, Livelihoods, and Conservation(Resilience Alliance, 2011) Amy E. Duchelle; P. Cronkleton; Karen A. Kainer; Gladys Guanacoma; Salvador A. GezanDuchelle, A. E., P. Cronkleton, K. A. Kainer, G. Guanacoma, and S. Gezan. 2011. Resource theft in tropical forest communities: implications for non-timber management, livelihoods, and conservation. Ecology and Society 16(1): 4. https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-03806-160104Item type: Item , Social Geomatics: Participatory Forest Mapping to Mediate Resource Conflict in the Bolivian Amazon(Springer Science+Business Media, 2010) P. Cronkleton; Marco Albornoz; Grenville Barnes; Kristen Evans; Wil de Jong