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Unasylva




Unasylva,the international journal of forestry and forest industries
published by the Food and Agricultue Organization of the United Nations,
is produced quarterly in English, French and Spanish. Unasylva
contains articles on all aspects of forestry: policy and planning;
conservation and management of forest-based plants and animals; rural
socio-economic development; species improvement; industrial
dvelopment; international trade; and environmental impact, including
the role of forests and trees in maintaining a sustainable base for
agricultural production at micro and macro levels as well as the effects
of environonmental change on forestry.

Each issue of the journal focuses on a specific theme. On publication of
each issue I will provide on the net, a copy of the table of contents and
the editorial, which serves both to express a point of view and to link the
main articles thematically. In addition, I will provide a list of the themes
of upcoming issues of the journal. Comments and/or proposals for
articles are welcome. Please bear in mind that copy deadlines are
approximately six months prior to publication, and also that, given its
nature (Unasylva is the only truly international forestry journal), each
issue endeavors to include articles from all regions of the world, and
priveleges authors from developing countries.

Unasylva Volume 45., No 180 - focusing on common property forest
resource management - will be published during the month of January
1995. The Table of Contents and Editorial follow:
M. McKean and E. Ostrom - Common property regimes in the forest: just a
relic from the past?;
J.T. Thomson and C. Coulibaly - Common property forest management
systems in Mali: resistance and viality under pressure;
N.S. Jodha - Common property resources and the dynamics of rural
poverty in India's dry regions;
M. Sarin - Joint forest management in India: achievements and
unaddressed challenges;
R. Brouwer - Baldios and common property resource management in
Portugal;
J.W. Bruce, S. Rudruppa and L. Zongmin - Experimenting with aproaches
to common property forestry in China;
T.  A. White and C. F. Runge - Coperative watershed management inHaiti:
common property and collective action;
M. Merlo - Common property forest management in northern Italy: a
historical and socio-economic profile;
S. A. Dembner - UNCED follow-up in forestry and the role of FAO.

Unasylva No. 180
Common property forest resource management
Editorial

In June 1968, in the title of an address to the American Association for
the Advancement of Science focusing on the need to control rapidly
increasing populations, an American biology professor coined a phrase
that has had far-reaching effects on management of natural resources
by local populations. In the now epic "The tragedy of the commons"
(reprinted in Science in December 1968), Dr. Garrett Hardin defined
(mistakenly) common property resources as unmanaged, "open access"
no-man's land, inevitably doomed to degradation as each individual with
access withdrew more of the resource than would be optimal from the
perspective of the users as a whole.

The Hardin paper (and its prevailing argument, echoed and elaborated
in numerous subsequent publications) had a powerful influence in
promoting policies in favour of individual privatization or government
appropriation and management of common property natural resources,
including forest land and trees. Unfortunately, the resources
nationalized by governments often were not open access lands, but
rather shared private property that was carefully managed by local
communities through internally coherent rules that regulated use and
controlled access. In a paradoxical situation, by assuming ownership and
responsibility for resource management, governments caused many of
these common property management systems to break down, creating in
fact the very type of open access situations they were intended to
control. The Hardin paper also helped focus the attention of an entire
generation of social scientists on the challenge of resource degradation,
and the role of local communities in sustainable management.

Now, nearly 30 years after publication of "The tragedy of the commons"
the negative experiences of governments with expropriation of common
property resources have led to a re-examination of the potential of
collective management; and there is a growing database of information
on practical experiments with the restoration or strengthening of
common property resource management systems. This issue of Unasylva
focuses on both these aspects with respect to forest resources.

In the lead article M. McKean and E. Ostrom examine the current and
future potential of common property regimes in the conservation and
sustainable use of forest resources. An extensive bibliography offers
readers the opportunity to explore the argument in greater depth. J.T.
Thomson and C. Coulibaly present evidence on the resurgence of local
initiatives in common property forest management systems in Mali,
highlighting the resistance and vitality of these systems even after
decades of official pressure.

In complementary articles, N.S. Jodha and M. Sarin consider common
property forest management in India. Based on a study covering dry
India, Jodha describes how common property resources constitute an
important component of community assets, comments on the decline of
these resources and the causal factors, and examines public
interventions involving common property resources. Sarin analyses the
Joint forest management programme - a promising if not unflawed
attempt to restore degraded public forest lands and provide benefits to
local people in a workable balance between government intervention
and community autonomy. She emphasizes the need to address issues of
inequity between women and men in the programme.

In Portugal, after more than 40 years of state control the baldios or
commons were restored to local populations in 1976. R. Brouwer analyses
how the baldios, largely transformed from open woodlands and pastures
to closed pine forests by the forest service during the period of national
control, are once again providing village communities with essential
products and amenities.

Although the volume of research on common property regimes has
increased dramatically, systematic empirical evaluations of the factors
underlying successful collective action are relatively few. T.A. White and
C. F. Runge undertake such an examination with regard to collective
watershed management in Haiti.

Another basic aspect of common property regimes concerns their cost
effectiveness as a management system under contemporary conditions.
M. Merlo presents a cost-benefit analysis of communal forest
management in northern Italy, indicating continued validity in the face
of modern socio-economic developments.

A key element for effective local or joint control is legal recognition,
i.e., a willingness and ability of government to legitimize and empower
local control mechanisms. S. Rudruppa, L. Zongmin and J. Bruce consider
approaches to common property forestry in China, where law, rather
than the starting point, is the capstone of social change.

The theoretical arguments and practical examples provided in this issue
of Unasylva demonstrate that there are circumstances where common
property regimes are the most appropriate form of forest mangement - a
self-reliant, participatory approach that provides sustainable benefits
and ensures resource conservation. Dr. Hardin has modified his position,
and now argues that the "tragedy of the comons" is inevitable only in a
situation characterized by the absence of management. Many
governments are taking a fresh look at the potential of common
property regimes for forest management. However, there are no simple,
solutions to the challenges of forest resource management; some
common property regimes fail, and other institutional arrangements
can also work effectively. The challenge is to continue the systematic
analysis of common property regimes in order to better understand their
potential within the mix of institutional options available for sustainable
forest resource management and development.

A list of focus topics for upcoming issues follows:
October 1995 - Forestry trade and marketing
January 1996 - Forestry extension

Comments, requests, suggestions, article proposals to
steve.dembner@FAO.org

Stephen A. Dembner
Editor, Unasylva
Coordinator, Information and Publications Programme
Forestry Department, FAO





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