International audienceRural people in developing countries including India continue to access a number of types of 'forests' to meet specific needs such as fuelwood, fodder, food, non-timber forest produce and timber for both subsistence and income generation. While a plethora of terms exist to describe the types of forests that rural people use—such as farm forests, social forests, community forests and small-scale for-ests—the expression domestic forest has recently been proposed. Domestic forest is a term aimed at capturing the diversity of forests transformed and managed by rural communities and a way to introduce a new scientific domain that recognises that production and conservation can be reconciled and that local communities can be...
This volume is a compilation of essays that focus on livelihood issues faced by forest communities o...
This paper analyses the historical trajectories of both British colonial rule and independent India ...
After about a hundred years of exclusive government control, forests in India are now being increasi...
International audienceRural people in developing countries including India continue to access a numb...
Rural people in developing countries including India continue to access a number of types of 'forest...
International audienceDecentralization policies around forest management in developing countries suc...
Despite a long history of confrontation between forest agencies and forest people, "indigenous" or "...
The multiplicity of interests around forests in India reflects the range of social groups who have a...
India has the second-largest tribal population after Africa. Most of them are greatly dependent on f...
Despite a long history of confrontation between forest agencies and forest people, “indigenous” or “...
Despite a long history of confrontation between forest agencies and forest people, “indigenous” or “...
Village communities like those in the rural areas of Rajasthan have undergone changes in their envir...
Provides a brief account of the development of the Joint Forest Management Scheme in India, especial...
International audienceIn the north-eastern hills of Meghalaya, the Khasi Hills project, self-adverti...
This paper analyses the underlying causes of secondary forest formation and recovery in India, parti...
This volume is a compilation of essays that focus on livelihood issues faced by forest communities o...
This paper analyses the historical trajectories of both British colonial rule and independent India ...
After about a hundred years of exclusive government control, forests in India are now being increasi...
International audienceRural people in developing countries including India continue to access a numb...
Rural people in developing countries including India continue to access a number of types of 'forest...
International audienceDecentralization policies around forest management in developing countries suc...
Despite a long history of confrontation between forest agencies and forest people, "indigenous" or "...
The multiplicity of interests around forests in India reflects the range of social groups who have a...
India has the second-largest tribal population after Africa. Most of them are greatly dependent on f...
Despite a long history of confrontation between forest agencies and forest people, “indigenous” or “...
Despite a long history of confrontation between forest agencies and forest people, “indigenous” or “...
Village communities like those in the rural areas of Rajasthan have undergone changes in their envir...
Provides a brief account of the development of the Joint Forest Management Scheme in India, especial...
International audienceIn the north-eastern hills of Meghalaya, the Khasi Hills project, self-adverti...
This paper analyses the underlying causes of secondary forest formation and recovery in India, parti...
This volume is a compilation of essays that focus on livelihood issues faced by forest communities o...
This paper analyses the historical trajectories of both British colonial rule and independent India ...
After about a hundred years of exclusive government control, forests in India are now being increasi...