1 / 11

Nalin Kishor, Tuukka Castrén, Ewald Rametsteiner COFO/WFW, Rome, September 25, 2012

Strengthening forest governance based on evidence, knowledge and inclusiveness. Nalin Kishor, Tuukka Castrén, Ewald Rametsteiner COFO/WFW, Rome, September 25, 2012. Structure. Interest in measuring governance Key issues in interventions Two topics Frameworks ICTs

naomi
Télécharger la présentation

Nalin Kishor, Tuukka Castrén, Ewald Rametsteiner COFO/WFW, Rome, September 25, 2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Strengthening forest governance based on evidence, knowledge and inclusiveness Nalin Kishor, Tuukka Castrén, Ewald Rametsteiner COFO/WFW, Rome, September 25, 2012

  2. Structure • Interest in measuring governance • Key issues in interventions • Two topics • Frameworks • ICTs • Conclusion and themes for discussions

  3. Growing interest in measuring forest governance • To meet the requirements of policy makers for better information to enhance SFM • Design of policy reforms and governance investments • More specifically, to feed into: • REDD+ • Forest legality schemes (FLEGT/VPA, Lacey, other consumer country legislation) • UNFF, etc. • Private investors decisions (investments, corporate responsibility) • Making civil-society participation more effective • Wider governance and anti-corruption work

  4. Three key issues for governance interventions • Evidence: • Systematic gathering of information on forest governance within a well-defined and comprehensive framework • Knowledge: • Relying on a combination of hard-facts and stakeholder /expert perceptions (gathered through multistakeholder consultations) • Inclusiveness: • With the sponsorship of government, but with results that can be used by many to develop consensus for reform and momentum for change.

  5. An Approach • FAO-PROFOR Framework for Assessing and monitoring forest governance • Expert group that produced the framework, launched in June 2011. • Common framework is organized as 3 pillars of governance • Six principles of good governance underpin the framework

  6. FAO-PROFOR Forest Governance Framework

  7. Knowledge: Practical examples • FAO: Tanzania, Vietnam, Zambia and Peru • World Bank: Russia, Burkina Faso and Uganda • UN-REDD: Ecuador, Indonesia, Nigeria and Vietnam • WRI: Brazil, Cameroon and Indonesia.

  8. Inclusiveness • Information should be known to all, easily available and in an easy-to-understand format. • Information should be collected on a regular basis and constantly updated and refined. • Role of Information Communications Technology (ICT)highlighted. • Support to development of national information systems to ensure that information is accessible, up-to-date and widely used.

  9. ICTs can promote good, transparent and equitable governance

  10. Ensuring information is accessible, up-to-date and widely used: FAO Open Foris z FAO Forestry

  11. Conclusions • High-level political interest to strengthen forest governance as a means to step up progress towards SFM and addressing REDD • More experience is available as countries have started to take action to improve evidence and knowledge base on forest governance; • Involvement of stakeholders and ICTs can enhance efficiency and effectiveness of information collection and use.

More Related