
Social forestry for a good life? The uneven well‐being benefits of Indonesia's social forestry scheme
Author(s) -
Toumbourou Tessa D.,
Dunphy Mia B.,
Mulyani Lilis,
Auwalin Ilmiawan,
Hartoto Annisa Sabrina,
Aji Gutomo Bayu,
Utomo Marcellinus Mandira Budi,
Amin Nurul Auliya,
Yaman Yasmita,
Fakhrani Ferdy Azmal,
Yasmin Pitaloka Ainun,
Afriyani Asia A.,
Arisanti Dian,
Tjawikrama Darkono,
Friedman Rachel S.,
Rawluk Andrea
Publication year - 2025
Publication title -
people and nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2575-8314
DOI - 10.1002/pan3.70042
Abstract The Indonesian government has scaled up its devolution of forest management to local communities in the form of social forestry, with the aim of improving forest management while delivering nature‐based well‐being (including livelihood) benefits for local communities. We investigate the varied well‐being impacts of social forestry management rights—an expression of human–nature relationships—and how these are distributed among different social groups in Indonesia. In a study conducted in four different village locations with social forestry management right permits in Indonesia, we employed a mixed methods approach comprising interviews (semi‐structured and life story) ( n = 80), focus group discussions (in‐person and online) ( n = 44) and a survey of 100 households in each site ( n = 400). We identified local conceptualizations of, and priorities for, well‐being. Our findings indicate that access to land and livelihood capitals that support productive and diverse livelihoods is central to well‐being. Good social relations are crucial for securing and utilising land to sustain a livelihood, and in turn, to achieve a good life. Material and social elements underpin other interconnected well‐being dimensions, including being able to perform religious pilgrimages, contribute to cultural and spiritual practices and provide security for one's children's future. Further, we found that social forestry secured land access, improved access to agricultural inputs and information, and diversified livelihoods of those who knew they were involved in social forestry—aligning particularly with material well‐being priorities valued locally. However, disparities in access to information meant that most villagers (67%) in areas granted social forestry permits knew little about the scheme. Active social forestry participants were from more well‐off households, while many less privileged people faced exclusions to participation and benefits. Unclear institutional processes, exclusionary enrolment practices and limited access to information hindered social forestry's potential to contribute to well‐being more broadly, risking increasing social inequalities locally. Policy implications : Our findings suggest the need for measures to ensure well‐being benefits from social forestry are distributed equitably. This is essential to avoid exacerbating social inequalities and to foster greater support for forest protection. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
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