Project Description
KEY RESEARCH
QUESTIONS
The overall research question for PEN is:
What is the current role of forests in poverty alleviation, and
how can that role be enhanced through better policy formulation and
implementation?
This question needs to be made more specific to become
researchable. PEN will do this by looking at several dimensions of
the forest-poverty link:
- the role in rural livelihoods (regular consumption, insurance, or
poverty reduction):
- the role for different groups (degrees of poverty, but also other
indicators, e.g. age, household headship, migrants);
- the role in different forest environments (forest abundance,
condition, type, management etc.);
- the role in different institutional contexts (e.g., tenure regime
and local management);
- the role in different market contexts (market access integration,
competitiveness in forest products markets, etc.).
By carefully investigating how these dimensions determine the forest-poverty
relationship, PEN can answer several more specific research questions, for
example:
-
What is the relationship between forest use/dependency and
household income/assets in different forest environments (similarities and
differences)?
-
What are the common characteristics of high
forest income across the different environments? Are the poor
universally more forests dependent than the better-off
households?
-
Has local forest ownership and management
increased the local forest benefits (and for which groups)?
-
How does forest dependency shift (e.g., from
products to services) with economic development and market
integration?
-
Is forest dependency just a temporary phenomenon
that disappears when other opportunities arise?
-
How do forest products markets shape the
people-forest relationship (investments, management,
degradation)?
-
Is there something special (market and policy
failures) about forests that prevent utilizing the full
potential in poverty alleviation, and – if so - what is that?
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