-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Im Auftrag von Lukas Giessen
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 19. Februar 2015 11:02
Betreff: Defining and assessing forest governance
Dear colleagues,
based on a joint effort among researchers from the International Union of Forest Research
Organizations (IUFRO), especially IUFRO Division 9.05 on Forest Policy and Governance, we
are happy to share with you an attempt to defining the concept of forest governance from a
research perspective (see atachment).
Below you will find the essence with regard to defining forest governance from a research
perspective.
Best wishes,
Lukas Giessen, PhD
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Senior Researcher
Chair of Forest and Nature Conservation Policy, University of Göttingen Büsgenweg 3, 37077
Göttingen/Germany
Phone: +49 551 39 33413
Web:
http://www.uni-goettingen.de/en/135009.html
Web Working Group:
http://www.uni-goettingen.de/en/350489.html
Forest governance research
Research into forest governance issues is a popular and timely endeavour. The high
relevance of international forest governance research is further reflected by the
International Union of Forest Research Organizations (IUFRO) dedicating to this very topic
its group 9.05 on Forest Policy and Governance, which includes a special working group
9.05.02 on Forest Governance.
Forest governance research can be conceptualized as social science inquiry into
forest-related decisions, their implementation and resulting effects within a given
institutional setting.
In order to arrive at relevant and valid conclusions, social science inquiry, more than
their physical sciences counterparts, need to clearly define the terms, concepts and
methodological frameworks which they apply. Unfortunately, this is not easily and, hence,
not always done in forest governance research, running the risk of rendering the concept
of forest governance a buzzword, rather than advancing scientific rigor.
Defining forest governance
In the abovementioned sense we propose a wide definition of forest governance, which
researchers may find useful to build upon and to further develop according to their
empirical cases. Accordingly, forest governance comprises a) all formal and informal,
public and private regulatory structures, i.e. institutions consisting of rules, norms,
principles, decision procedures, concerning forests, their utilisation and their
conservation, b) the interactions between public and private actors therein and c) the
effects of either on forests.
Assessing forest governance
Assessing forest governance can be done as a scientific endeavour conducted within the
scientific realm, or as a practical enterprise undertaken by actors in the field of forest
conservation and utilisation practices.
Within the scientific realm, the researchers are guided by methodological frameworks,
which they develop intersubjectively in order to advance scientific knowledge about real
world phenomena. There are two broad approaches for such scientific analyses: Analytical
studies are concerned with the mere reflection of these phenomena and their explanation
and strive for developing value-free methodological frameworks. In contrast, normative
analyses imply value judgements on desirable conditions within their methodological
frameworks and often develop recommendations towards selected ends. In both approaches,
the researchers are free to define their concepts and hypotheses on potential causalities
following scientific thought and rigour.
On the contrary, practice-oriented assessments of forest governance inherently imply value
judgements which are closely related to the interests of the authors’ organisations
developing the methodological frameworks. Recently, a number of such practice-oriented
frameworks for assessing forest governance have been developed (FAO 2014, WRI 2013). In
such works, value judgements are an implicit or even explicit part of the methodological
framework. WRI (2013), for example, build on the normative concept of good forest
governance. This does not mean that such assessments are non-scientific; they often are a
combination of scientific and practical aspects which are integrated and through this
provide for added value to real world challenges .
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