Collaboration between stakeholders in sustainable forest management
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New research on sustainable forest management (SFM) initiatives in Russia and Sweden has indicated that the main challenges to SFM are combining top-down and bottom up approaches to management, coordinating the different sectors involved and including all actors and stakeholders.
By its nature, SFM requires collaboration between stakeholders ranging from international policy makers to local people who use or live in the forest. The model forest (MF) concept, developed in Canada, encourages such collaboration. The study analysed four examples of MF initiatives in boreal forests: two in Sweden and two in Russia. The aim was to understand opportunities for collaboration between multiple levels and how it contributes to SFM. Researchers conducted 198 interviews with stakeholders including MF co-ordinators, landowners, NGOs and private business. The analysis focused on three key features:
Motivations for  development of sustainable forest management  - All four initiatives had  the broad objective of implementing SFM at  the local or regional level through  stakeholder partnerships. At a more  practical level there were a range of  motivations, which were  influenced by the challenges faced in the specific  areas. In Russia the  motivation for one initiative was to protect pristine  forests from  harvesting, whilst in the other it was to sustainably support  timber  for international companies. In Sweden both initiatives were motivated  by  the need to establish a platform to address local conflicts over  land  use.
Governance System - This includes the structures and   processes through which partners make and implement decisions. These  differed  between the two countries. The MF projects in Russia were  long-term and  developed as a result of foreign donors interested in  Russian SFM or strong  local champions. Decisions were made after  approval from the donors and local  people participated through public  hearings, forest clubs and by obtaining  grants for activities such as  ecological festivals. To promote sustainable  development, specialists  were trained on solving problems related to SFM. In  contrast there was  limited executive decision making in the Swedish MF  initiatives and a  large number of short-term projects and activities were  initiated by  stakeholders. In one initiative local champions legitimised a range  of  local activities and in the other a large number of committed  representatives  from stakeholder groups were the instigators.
Networks among  different partners - The study  distinguished between three types of  system or network. Firstly, there  was a bottom-up system with strong integration  among local stakeholders  and a distant interaction with collaborators on a  national and  international level, as found in one of the Swedish initiatives   (Foundation Säfsen Forests). Secondly, there was a top-down system where   decisions are made at the national and international levels with  involvement of  experts on a temporary basis as seen in Russia (Pskov  MF). Finally, there is a  combined top-down and bottom-up system with  strong interaction between national  and local levels and strong  involvement of regional stakeholders. This mixed  system was seen in  both Sweden (Vilhelmina) and Russia (Komi).
The difference between the MF initiatives raises a number of questions as to how to maintain SFM. For example, can the Russian initiatives that are supported from abroad adapt to local conditions in the long run? Is dependency on local champions in Sweden a potential vulnerability, especially if these entrepreneurs retire or have other reasons for abandoning the process? To answer these questions and assess the adaptive capacity of SFM initiatives there needs to be further applied research with participation of local and national actors in the long-term development of the multi-stakeholder collaboration.
Source: Elbakidze, M, Angelstam, P.K., Sandström, C. & Axelsson, R. (2010) Multi-Stakeholder Collaboration in Russian and Swedish Model Forest Initiatives: Adaptive Governance Toward Sustainable Forest Management? Ecology and Society. 15(2):14. This article is free to view at: www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss2/art14/
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