CIFOR-ICRAF aborda retos y oportunidades locales y, al mismo tiempo, ofrece soluciones a los problemas globales relacionados con los bosques, los paisajes, las personas y el planeta.

Aportamos evidencia empírica y soluciones prácticas para transformar el uso de la tierra y la producción de alimentos: conservando y restaurando ecosistemas, respondiendo a las crisis globales del clima, la malnutrición, la pérdida de biodiversidad y la desertificación. En resumen, mejorando la vida de las personas.

CIFOR-ICRAF produce cada año más de 750 publicaciones sobre agroforestería, bosques y cambio climático, restauración de paisajes, derechos, políticas forestales y mucho más, y en varios idiomas. .

CIFOR-ICRAF aborda retos y oportunidades locales y, al mismo tiempo, ofrece soluciones a los problemas globales relacionados con los bosques, los paisajes, las personas y el planeta.

Aportamos evidencia empírica y soluciones prácticas para transformar el uso de la tierra y la producción de alimentos: conservando y restaurando ecosistemas, respondiendo a las crisis globales del clima, la malnutrición, la pérdida de biodiversidad y la desertificación. En resumen, mejorando la vida de las personas.

CIFOR–ICRAF publishes over 750 publications every year on agroforestry, forests and climate change, landscape restoration, rights, forest policy and much more – in multiple languages.

CIFOR–ICRAF addresses local challenges and opportunities while providing solutions to global problems for forests, landscapes, people and the planet.

We deliver actionable evidence and solutions to transform how land is used and how food is produced: conserving and restoring ecosystems, responding to the global climate, malnutrition, biodiversity and desertification crises. In short, improving people’s lives.

Co-evolving perceptions on Central Kalimantan degraded peatlands: case study from CIFOR bioenergy research

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This paper explains how local and extra-local perspectives interact to co-produce new interventions on tropical peatlands. By historicizing past attempts in peatland repurposing project and bioenergy development program, both state and non-state apparatus have reinvented their imagination to repurpose peatlands as a valuable landscape for carbon sequestration and green energy development. Meanwhile, the frequent reinventions of development program on peatland landscape emerges local skepticism towards external intervention. One of the tangential policies for repurposing peatlands is the prohibition of the use of fire to manage lands. While this policy is an important milestone to decrease peatland fires, the implementation of this policy also restricts farmers to efficiently use their labor for clearing their lands, in which peatlands are increasingly left unproductive for extensive cultivation. While farmers see these consequences as dystopian, development apparatus perceive and render this problem a potential avenue for their utopian intervention projects. The interaction of these perspectives renders peatlands a valuable landscape for state policy experimentation, or a landscape to experiment on new proposed solutions. By analyzing the case from CIFOR bioenergy research in Buntoi Village, Central Kalimantan, this paper highlights the importance for development apparatus to assume the active role in finding the middle ground between permitting the use of fire for cultivation, restoring degraded peatlands, and following on global climate mitigation agenda by increasing carbon sequestration within peatlands. Lastly, a less-rigid approach on fire prohibition policy can better serve the overarching attempt to restore degraded peatlands.
    Año de publicación

    2019

    Autores

    Mecca, B.M.

    Idioma

    English

    Palabras clave

    peatlands, bioenergy, degraded land, ecological restoration

    Geográfico

    Indonesia

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