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Forest Community Connections: Implications for Research, Management, and Governance [Hardback]

  • Format: Hardback, 292 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, weight: 1200 g
  • Pub. Date: 12-Aug-2008
  • Publisher: Resources for the Future Press (RFF Press)
  • ISBN-10: 1933115688
  • ISBN-13: 9781933115689
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  • Price: 205,30 €
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  • Format: Hardback, 292 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, weight: 1200 g
  • Pub. Date: 12-Aug-2008
  • Publisher: Resources for the Future Press (RFF Press)
  • ISBN-10: 1933115688
  • ISBN-13: 9781933115689
Other books in subject:
The connections between communities and forests are complex and evolving, presenting challenges to forest managers, researchers, and communities themselves. Dependency on timber extraction and timber-related industries is no longer a universal characteristic of the forest community. Remoteness is also a less common feature, as technology, workforce mobility, tourism, and 'amenity migrants' increasingly connect rural to urban places.

Forest Community Connections explores the responses of forest communities to a changing economy, changing federal policy, and concerns about forest health from both within and outside forest communities. Focusing primarily on the United States, the book examines the ways that social scientists work with communities-their role in facilitating social learning, informing policy decisions, and contributing to community well being. Bringing perspectives from sociology, anthropology, political science, and forestry, the authors review a range of management issues, including wildfire risk, forest restoration, labor force capacity, and the growing demand for a growing variety of forest goods and services. They examine the increasingly diverse aesthetic and cultural values that forest residents attribute to forests, the factors that contribute to strong and resilient connections between communities and forests, and consider a range of governance structures to positively influence the well being of forest communities and forests, including collaboration and community-based forestry.

Reviews

'This book provides a comprehensive understanding of what has occurred in what otherwise might be considered tumultuous times. The past two decades have seen a dramatic shift in the social forces that affect natural resources policy. This shift has created many new and innovative relationships among individuals, organizations, communities, and forest ecosystems. Policymakers, forest managers, and community leaders will find the book useful as they work toward understanding the dynamics of natural resources management today.' Gordon Bradley, University of Washington

Contributors vii
Preface xi
Introduction
Community and Forest Connections: Continuity and Change
3(24)
Victoria E. Sturtevant
Ellen M. Donoghue
PART I: UNDERSTANDING FOREST COMMUNITIES
Social Assessment of Forest Communities: For Whom and for What?
27(18)
Victoria E. Sturtevant
Ellen M. Donoghue
Socioeconomic Monitoring and Forest Management
45(21)
Susan Charnley
Engaging Communities Through Participatory Research
66(25)
Jennifer S. Arnold
Maria E. Fernandez-Gimenez
PART II: COMMUNITIES IN THE CONTEXT OF EMERGING AND PERSISTENT FOREST MANAGEMENT ISSUES
Evolving Interdependencies of Community and Forest Health
91(18)
Mark Nechodom
Dennis R. Becker
Richard Haynes
Communities and Wildfire Policy
109(18)
Toddi A. Steelman
Amenity Migration, Rural Communities, and Public Lands
127(16)
Linda E. Kruger
Rhonda Mazza
Maria Stiefel
Integrating Commercial Nontimber Forest Product Harvesters into Forest Management
143(19)
Eric T. Jones
Kathryn A. Lynch
Job Quality for Forest Workers
162(23)
Cassandra Moseley
PART III: COMMUNITIES AND FOREST GOVERNANCE
Institutional Arrangements in Community-based Forestry
185(20)
Cecilia Danks
Family Forest Owners
205(14)
John C. Bliss
Creating Community Forests
219(24)
Jill M. Belsky
Collaborative Forest Management
243(20)
Margaret Ann Moote
Conclusion
Taking Stock of Community and Forest Connections
263(12)
Ellen M. Donoghue
Victoria E. Sturtevant
Index 275
Ellen M. Donoghue is a social scientist with the USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. Her research focuses on the institutional dimensions of community and resource management agency interactions.

Victoria E. Sturtevant is professor of sociology in the Department of Environmental Studies at Southern Oregon University. Her research has focused on forest communities in transition; collaborative stewardship, monitoring, and planning; and the social dimensions of wildfire.