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Transforming Forest Conflicts: Learning from North-South Conflicts over Community Forests in Terai Region of Nepal
Author(s) -
Naya Sharma Paudel,
Prabin Bhusal,
Paul Thompson,
Parvin Sultana,
Anukram Adhikary,
Kamal Bhandari
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of forest and livelihood
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1684-0186
DOI - 10.3126/jfl.v16i1.22879
Subject(s) - devolution (biology) , forest management , deforestation (computer science) , community forestry , environmental resource management , corporate governance , participatory action research , collective action , environmental planning , common pool resource , geography , citizen journalism , political science , business , economic growth , ecology , forestry , archaeology , human evolution , finance , politics , computer science , economics , law , biology , programming language , environmental science
Continued forest conflicts in Nepal’s Terai have not only undermined sustainable forest management in the region but have also contributed to emerging social unrest that can undermine transition towards new federal Nepal. Using an action research approach involving intensive participatory research methods, this paper shares experiences of current initiatives and their challenges in transforming forest-conflicts between the northern communities and southern communities in the Terai region of Nepal. The action research process helped bring the conflicting communities together, develop a shared understanding through participatory resource assessment and analysis of socio-institutional processes among the conflicting communities, and help devise a widely acceptable benefit sharing arrangement. Consequently, there has been a substantial reduction in conflict through an inclusive and extended governance arrangement. Consideration of traditional use of forests by distant as well as adjacent communities will be helpful to reduce potential heightening of conflicts in the face of policies that emphasises more on protection and restoration of forest as a response to historical trend of deforestation and emerging threats of climate change. Finally, we suggest that enabling policies including further devolution of forest management rights to local communities and adoption of adaptive approach to resource and institutional management can help mitigate northern communities-southern communities’ conflict in Terai.

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