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The loss of woodland in Mozambique is more than an environmental issue.
Forests and landscapes with trees are such an important part of a number of different Sustainable Development Goals that we recommend working towards a transformative ‘forest module’.
Small and locally-controlled forest-linked producers are crucial to development and environmental protection.
Market-based approaches to environmental management are increasingly common in all sectors of the economy. Forestry is no exception.
Forestry can strengthen communities’ livelihoods, contribute to poverty reduction and be environmentally sustainable when it is based on the local control and capacity to make productive use of forest resources, guided by fair and effect
Land is cheap and is perceived to be abundant in Africa. A scramble for its land, following the food and fuel crisis three years ago, is on. European and North American companies have been acquiring land to grow export and biofuel crops and to supply their need for pulp and paper. Now they’re being joined by newly emerging economies – in particular Brazil, India and China – which are also increasingly acquiring large tracts of land and searching for other natural resources, in particular water and minerals.
This book records the results of a five-year collaborative research programme involving more than 60 scientists in Malaysia and the United Kingdom.
This paper was produced in preparation for the 72nd session of the UN Economic Commission for Europe Committee on Forests and Forest Industry held in Kazan, Republic of Tatarstan, Russian Federation, 18-21 November 2014, where discussion
REDD readiness is about developing national strategies for REDD+ including the necessary systems to ensure reduced DD, encompassing systems for monitoring/carbon accounting and distribution of international compensations.
This draft paper was drawn up following the International Conference of the same title Cape Town, South Africa, 6-8 November 2002.
The key lessons learnt were:








