The investigation was carried out through a combination of structured and semistructured qualitative techniques within six villages in Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea and Rwanda, as part of a wider collaborative research project, COBAM, funded by the African Development Bank. The methodology was designed to help describe how forest communities are experiencing and adapting to environmental change, and the role that forest resources and environmental management policies play in terms of people’s livelihoods. The findings of the research highlight the need to understand both the limits of synergy, and the constraints and trade-offs for rural livelihoods that may be associated with a forest conservation agenda driven by the additional impetus of carbon sequestration. The search for synergy may be conceptually laudable, but if forest management actions do not take account of on-the-ground contexts of constraints and social trade-offs then the result of those actions risksundermining wider livelihood resilience.
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Publication year
2014
Authors
Few, R.; Gross-Camp, N.; Martin, A.
Language
English
Keywords
environmental change, forests, climate change
Geographic
Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon