Multi-level Forest Governance in Asia: Concepts, Challenges and the Way Forward

Front Cover
Makoto Inoue, Ganesh P. Shivakoti
SAGE Publications, Jul 28, 2015 - Business & Economics - 508 pages

A fresh look and comparative perspectives from various Asian countries on multi-level forest governance.

This book presents the remarkable diversity of policy implementation in forest resource management in 14 Asian countries: five in South Asia (Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bhutan), six in South-east Asia (Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam and Laos) and three in East Asia (China, Korea and Japan). It explores how effective forest governance can be achieved by bridging multi-level outcomes. Further, this volume highlights the importance of context in defining flexible policies for policy makers, development practitioners and the academic communities of these countries. It also provides assistance to government officers, NGOs and academics based on relevant empirical information on resource management.

About the author (2015)

Makoto Inoue is Professor of Forest Sociology and Governance, University of Tokyo, Japan. He has co-edited People and Forest: Policy and Local Reality in Southeast Asia, the Russian Far East, and Japan and The State of the Environment in Asia 2006/2007.

Ganesh P. Shivakoti is Adjunct Professor of Agricultural and Natural Resources Economics, Asian Institute of Technology, Bangkok, and Visiting Professor, Arizona State University, US. He has co-authored Improving Irrigation in Asia: Sustainable Performance of an Innovative Intervention in Nepal with Nobel Laureate Elionr Ostrom.

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