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Local-level criteria and indicators: an Aboriginal perspective on sustainable forest management
Author(s) -
Erin Sherry,
Regine Halseth,
Gail Fondahl,
Melanie Karjala,
B. Paz De Leon
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
forestry an international journal of forest research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.747
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1464-3626
pISSN - 0015-752X
DOI - 10.1093/forestry/cpi048
Subject(s) - sustainable forest management , sustainability , popularity , forest management , environmental resource management , business , sustainable management , perspective (graphical) , environmental planning , forestry , geography , political science , computer science , economics , ecology , artificial intelligence , law , biology
Summary As tools for improving the sustainability of forest management, criteria and indicator (C&I) frameworks have grown in popularity over the last decade. Such frameworks have been largely derived from top-down approaches to determining critical measures of forest management success. While useful, they fail to capture many C&I of critical importance to local populations, who experience forest management strategies fi rst hand and who have their own defi nitions of sustainability. Using archival materials, our research begins to identify one First Nation's forest values and compares these local-level C&I with three well-known C&I frameworks for sustainable forestry. We demonstrate that local-level defi nitions can provide additional C&I, as well as additional levels of detail to C&I that they share with the national and international frameworks. Both are crucial to developing strategies for sustainable management that meet local as well as broader needs and desires.

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