Linking Forest Tenure Reform, Environmental Compliance, and Incentives: Lessons from REDD+ Initiatives in the Brazilian Amazon
Pervasive tenure insecurity in developing countries is a key challenge for REDD+. Brazil, a leader in REDD+, has advanced efforts to link forest tenure reform and environmental compliance. We describe how these policies have shaped sub-national interventions with detailed data on land tenure and livelihoods in four REDD+ pilot sites in the Brazilian Amazon. Despite different local contexts, REDD+ proponents have converged on a similar strategy of collaborating with government agencies to clarify tenure and pave the way for a mix of regulatory enforcement and incentive-based REDD+ mechanisms. This polycentric governance model holds promise for effective and equitable REDD+ implementation.
Year of publication: |
2014
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Authors: | Duchelle, Amy E. ; Cromberg, Marina ; Gebara, Maria Fernanda ; Guerra, Raissa ; Melo, Tadeu ; Larson, Anne ; Cronkleton, Peter ; Börner, Jan ; Sills, Erin ; Wunder, Sven ; Bauch, Simone ; May, Peter ; Selaya, Galia ; Sunderlin, William D. |
Published in: |
World Development. - Elsevier, ISSN 0305-750X. - Vol. 55.2014, C, p. 53-67
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Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Subject: | Latin America | Brazil | climate change | deforestation | forest degradation | property rights |
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