2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.landusepol.2018.02.014
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Illegality and inequity in Ghana’s cocoa-forest landscape: How formalization can undermine farmers control and benefits from trees on their farms

Abstract: Schemes to promote sustainable forest management have increasingly focused on addressing widespread informalities in timber production, based on the presumed links between formalisation, the maintenance of forest cover and local welfare. This trend is typified by the EU Forest Law Enforcement, Governance and Trade (FLEGT) initiative and associated Voluntary Partnership Agreements (VPA) aimed at eradicating the trade of illegal wood between partner countries and the EU. Yet there is concern that such initiative… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…National forest laws in many countries favour political elites and/or large-scale industry actors. The focus of international initiatives on international transparency may render local actors, and the impacts on local markets, relatively invisible or illegitimate (Hirons et al 2018). Yet it is not inevitable that the implementation of SDG 16 will simply reinforce these trends.…”
Section: The Rule Of Law Accountability Transparency and Access To mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…National forest laws in many countries favour political elites and/or large-scale industry actors. The focus of international initiatives on international transparency may render local actors, and the impacts on local markets, relatively invisible or illegitimate (Hirons et al 2018). Yet it is not inevitable that the implementation of SDG 16 will simply reinforce these trends.…”
Section: The Rule Of Law Accountability Transparency and Access To mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, this could be related to the relatively small variation in shade management we encountered and that we were not comparing smallholder plots with intensively-managed, mono-cropped cocoa farms. This relatively uniform shade management could be related to government policies on tree tenure acting as a disincentive to maintain more than a minimum number of shade trees (Hirons et al, 2018a). Regarding location in the landscape, we detected a small yield benefit for farms within 1 km of a contiguous forest area, suggesting an economic benefit forest conservation is having in this landscape for those able to benefit directly from cocoa cultivation.…”
Section: Relaxing Ecological Limitsmentioning
confidence: 73%
“…https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108765015.018 Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 81.156.186.142, on 12 Dec 2019 at 11:09:06, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, of international initiatives on international transparency may render local actors, and the impacts on local markets, relatively invisible or illegitimate (Hirons et al 2018). Yet it is not inevitable that the implementation of SDG 16 will simply reinforce these trends.…”
Section: The Rule Of Law Accountability Transparency and Access To mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To date, Ghana's efforts to implement the VPA have been focused on producing FLEGT-licensed timber for export, though no FLEGT licenses have been granted in Ghana so far. Well-documented concerns about how the current legal system in Ghana perpetuates the criminality of farmers harvesting trees on their own lands effectively remain unaddressed (Hansen et al 2018, Hirons 2018.…”
Section: Case Study 162 a Comparison Of The Flegt Vpa And Redd+ In Gmentioning
confidence: 99%
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