2013
DOI: 10.17528/cifor/004183
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Taking migration seriously: what are the implications for gender and community forestry?

Abstract: • The growing 'multilocality' of rural households and livelihoods, prompted by globalization and the expansion of markets, is likely to have profound effects on who governs forests and how forests are governed, and the consequences for people and forests.• Case studies of two Nepalese villages having different migration patterns and social structures show that forest governance has been feminized in one village and become entrenched and further male dominated in another.• Policies and policy-oriented literatur… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…Giri and Darnhofer (2010) understand male out-migration as an opportunity for increasing women's access to forest resources and power over forest governance. An ethnographic study by Basnett (2013) indicates that this opportunity very much depends on interlocking gender and social differentiation.…”
Section: Demographic Change: Migration Urbanisation and Agrarian Tran...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Giri and Darnhofer (2010) understand male out-migration as an opportunity for increasing women's access to forest resources and power over forest governance. An ethnographic study by Basnett (2013) indicates that this opportunity very much depends on interlocking gender and social differentiation.…”
Section: Demographic Change: Migration Urbanisation and Agrarian Tran...mentioning
confidence: 99%