Overseas Development Institute
Overseas Development Institute
Banner Images
Forests, markets and the poor Forest tribe, Kurebahal Village, Badrama Wildlife sanctuary, Orissa, 2007 Source: flick/basoo! http://flickr.com/photos/basoo/
Forest tribe, Kurebahal Village, Badrama Wildlife sanctuary, Orissa, 2007 Source: flick/basoo!
Key resources
To view a full list of
resources, click here
Forestry Briefing 14 coverThe implications of carbon financing for pro-poor community forestry
ODI Forestry Briefing
Resource front cover
Links
ODI Theme - Forestry
Contacts
Full team list
 

Forests provide important economic resource for the rural and urban poor, providing everything from fuelwood and timber, cooking oils and bushmeat to agricultural inputs and medicinal products. They are also the source of globally-valued products and services.

Public involvement in forest management has important governance dimensions. It also has major implications for the integration of poor rural producers into the national and international economy. This has potential equity benefits, but also harbours many risks.

Current areas of work

The Forests, Environment and Climate Change Programme aims to increase understanding of the livelihood values of forests, and to identify opportunities for the rural poor to obtain greater benefits from the commercial use of forest products.

Key areas of Programme involvement include:

  • Landscape-level analysis and planning as a means of meeting both biodiversity and rural livelihoods objectives;
  • Community involvement in timber transformation and downstream processing;
  • Commercialisation of non-timber forest products;
  • Bushmeat as a trade and wildlife management issue;
  • Domestication of indigenous trees;
  • On-farm tree conservation;
  • Establishment of an electronic resource on rural development forestry.

Key projects
To view a full list of projects, click here
The Poverty-Forests Toolkit: showing what forests mean to the poor
Child on a fishing trip in Cameroon Source:flick/localsurfer http://flickr.com/photos/localsurfer/   Forestry often has a low profile within national policies and strategies for poverty reduction because the contribution of forest products and services to rural livelihoods is not sufficiently understood. The Poverty-Forests Toolkit aims to address this gap
Neil Bird June 2008
Action Research on Poverty Impacts of Participatory Forest Management (ARPIP)
Children's Day in Brazilian forest town Source: http://flickr.com/photos/beija-flor/   Aims to make participatory forest management (PFM) approaches more "pro-poor". PFM is taken to include community forestry, joint forest management, co-management and community-based forest management.
Cecilia Luttrell and Kate Schreckemberg Ongoing