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Volume 2 | Issue 1 | Spring 2006

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Abstract

Understanding decentralized forest governance: an application of the institutional analysis and development framework

Krister Andersson
Department of Political Science and Environmental Studies Program, University of Colorado, Ketchum 126, UCB 333, Boulder, CO 80309 USA (email: krister.andersson@colorado.edu)

This paper analyzes how local institutional arrangements shape outcomes in the increasingly decentralized policy regimes of the non-industrialized world. The goal is to evaluate local institutional strategies associated with effective forest governance. I use the Institutional Analysis and Development (IAD) framework to study the institutional conditions conducive to effective decentralized forest governance and how these relate to sustainability. The IAD-guided analysis allows me to formulate a series of testable hypotheses about which institutional factors influence the likelihood for successful governance outcomes in a decentralized context. I then test the hypotheses using recent empirical data from forestry-sector activities in 32 randomly selected municipal governments in Bolivia. Preliminary results suggest that local governance systems are more successful when the system’s governance actors enjoy favorable conditions for information exchange and learning.

KEYWORDS: local planning, local politics, developing world, forestry, resource management, development policy

Citation: Andersson, K. 2006. Understanding decentralized forest governance: an application of the institutional analysis and development framework. Sustainability: Science, Practice, & Policy 2(1):25–35. http://ejournal.nbii.org/archives/vol2iss1/0507-010.andersson.html.
Published online July 12, 2006

© 2006 Andersson


 
 
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