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Assessing the sustainability of bamboo management in central Indian forests

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dc.contributor.author Singhal, Rekha.
dc.date.accessioned 2021-02-02T11:45:38Z
dc.date.available 2021-02-02T11:45:38Z
dc.date.issued 2021-01
dc.identifier.citation Tambe, S., Patnaik, S., Upadhyay, A. P., Edgaonkar, A., Singhal, R., Bisaria, J., Srivastava, P., Dahake, K., Hiralal, M. H., Tofa, D., Telharkar, S., Edlabadkar, V., Dethe, V., & Shekhar, K. (2021). Assessing the sustainability of bamboo management in central Indian forests. Forests, Trees and Livelihoods, 30(1), 28-46. en_US
dc.identifier.issn 2164-3075
dc.identifier.uri https://doi.org/10.1080/14728028.2020.1852975
dc.identifier.uri http://idr.iimranchi.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/901
dc.description.abstract The purpose of this study is to assess the management of bamboo across the gradient of government and community-managed forests in Maharashtra, a leading Central-Indian state in decentralized forest governance. Over the last few decades, new right-based legislations have paved the way for decentralizing forest governance in India. We first pioneered the multi-stakeholder co-production of criteria and indicators to assess the sustainability of bamboo management. Following this, the sustainability assessment was carried out using mixed methods combining vegetation surveys, focus group discussions and secondary records. We could not detect a significant role of governance in determining bamboo health across governance systems. Instead, sites with favourable locality and biotic factors supported a healthy bamboo crop. We found that while government institutions maximized financial efficiency, community institutions performed better on delivering livelihood benefits and participatory decision making. We could not find evidence of large scale over-harvesting in the community-managed forests. On the contrary, less than 5% of the bamboo potential in these villages was harvested. Traditional bamboo management across the governance gradient focused largely on production aspects. Graduating to sustainable bamboo management will require better protection, resource augmentation, sustainable harvest, enhancing livelihood benefits and creating new bulk markets. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Forests, Trees and Livelihoods en_US
dc.subject Crietiria en_US
dc.subject Indicators en_US
dc.subject Bamboo health en_US
dc.subject Livelihoods en_US
dc.subject Governance system en_US
dc.subject Institutions en_US
dc.subject IIM Ranchi en_US
dc.title Assessing the sustainability of bamboo management in central Indian forests en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dc.volume 30 en_US
dc.issue 1 en_US


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