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District governments and poverty alleviation in forest areas in Indonesia


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Record Type:Brief
Author:Andrianto, A.; Wollenberg, E.; Cahyat, A.; Goenner, C.; Moeliono, M.; Limberg, G.; Iwan, R.
Abstract:District governments in Indonesia are in the early stages of trying to reduce poverty in their areas. We explain the influences on district officials’ ability to effectively address poverty in two forest districts based on observations between 2003 and 2005. We found that centrally-imposed programs have created bureaucratic requirements that officials are reluctant to meet or prefer to use to their own benefit. District initiatives for economic development rarely reach the poor and even increase their vulnerability. This poor performance can be explained by weak incentives and institutions, unclear strategies and information and little participation of the poor themselves. District, provincial and central authorities need to ensure benefits for district officials who work to reduce poverty, have coherent, simple strategies, enable poor communities to voice their needs, revitalize coordination with funding and stronger leadership, and enable monitoring by districts and communities of government programs impacts on poverty.
Subject (Topic):poverty, decentralization, policy
Subject (Geo):Indonesia
Physical Description:12p.
Publisher:CIFOR, Bogor, Indonesia.
Publication Year:2006
Language:english
E-Files: PDF: Indonesian ( size 0.5MB )
PDF: English ( size 1 MB )


Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
CIFOR advances human wellbeing, environmental conservation and equity by conducting research to inform policies and practices that affect forests in developing countries. CIFOR is one of 15 centres within the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR).