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NGOs come and go but business continues: lessons from co-management institutional arrangements for governance of the Arabuko-Sokoke Forest Reserve in Kenya

Ming'ate, FLM
Rennie, Hamish
Memon, A
Date
2014
Type
Journal Article
Fields of Research
ANZSRC::0705 Forestry Sciences , ANZSRC::070108 Sustainable Agricultural Development , ANZSRC::150303 Corporate Governance and Stakeholder Engagement , ANZSRC::4104 Environmental management , ANZSRC::4404 Development studies
Abstract
© 2014 Taylor & Francis. The objective of this paper is to examine the current institutional arrangements for governance of the Arabuko-Sokoke Forest Reserve (ASFR) and show their major contribution in the ASFR co-management business of conserving the forest and providing livelihoods to the poor forest-dependent communities. Despite the fact that funding from non-governmental organizations ended, the ASFR co-management business did not stall. The institutional arrangements for co-management were deemed to be the major component that contributed to the continuation of the ASFR co-management business. To demonstrate this hypothesis, the paper explores four main areas that shape the institutional arrangement of the ASFR co-management regime, informed by common property theories: (1) how governance arrangement structures for the ASFR are organized; (2) villagers perceptions and awareness of the co-management structure; (3) co-management arrangement for access, ownership and use of the various forest resources; and (4) importance of the forest resources to the households. The co-management piloting and non-piloting communities adjacent to the forest and who have been depending on the forest as a source of their livelihoods are compared in order to understand the role of the ASFR co-management institutional arrangements in the sustainability of its business.
Rights
© 2014 Taylor & Francis
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