Forest Law Enforcement and
Governance (FLEG) has been justified as a way of benefiting
the poor by improving state revenues from forests, but the
direct social impacts - including the outlawing of small-scale
forest use, and creating social exclusion - have gained
only little attention. This study of community experiences
in Bolivia, Cameroon, Canada, Honduras, Indonesia and Nicaragua
is an attempt to fill the gap.
Publications are free
to Indigenous
Peoples
Organisations and
half price to
Southern NGOs
For details
click here