Forests, timber and rural livelihoods: implications for social safeguards in the Ghana-EU voluntary partnership agreement

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Forests, timber and rural livelihoods : implications for social safeguards in the Ghana-EU voluntary partnership agreement. / Hansen, Christian Pilegaard; Pouliot, Mariève; Marfo, Emmanuel; Obiri, Beatrice D.; Treue, Thorsten.

In: Small-Scale Forestry, Vol. 14, No. 4, 2015, p. 401-422.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hansen, CP, Pouliot, M, Marfo, E, Obiri, BD & Treue, T 2015, 'Forests, timber and rural livelihoods: implications for social safeguards in the Ghana-EU voluntary partnership agreement', Small-Scale Forestry, vol. 14, no. 4, pp. 401-422. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11842-015-9295-9

APA

Hansen, C. P., Pouliot, M., Marfo, E., Obiri, B. D., & Treue, T. (2015). Forests, timber and rural livelihoods: implications for social safeguards in the Ghana-EU voluntary partnership agreement. Small-Scale Forestry, 14(4), 401-422. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11842-015-9295-9

Vancouver

Hansen CP, Pouliot M, Marfo E, Obiri BD, Treue T. Forests, timber and rural livelihoods: implications for social safeguards in the Ghana-EU voluntary partnership agreement. Small-Scale Forestry. 2015;14(4):401-422. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11842-015-9295-9

Author

Hansen, Christian Pilegaard ; Pouliot, Mariève ; Marfo, Emmanuel ; Obiri, Beatrice D. ; Treue, Thorsten. / Forests, timber and rural livelihoods : implications for social safeguards in the Ghana-EU voluntary partnership agreement. In: Small-Scale Forestry. 2015 ; Vol. 14, No. 4. pp. 401-422.

Bibtex

@article{f7c430d261294a19b8ff2721238af689,
title = "Forests, timber and rural livelihoods: implications for social safeguards in the Ghana-EU voluntary partnership agreement",
abstract = "Based on detailed income data of 478 rural households, the nexus between forest, trees and rural livelihoods in Ghana is investigated and applied to assess implications of the Voluntary Partnership Agreement (VPA) between the EU and Ghana on illegal logging. It is found that, after crops, environmental income (cash and subsistence) is the most important contributor to households{\textquoteright} total yearly net income. Fuelwood, bushmeat and wild foods from plants are the most important environmental products. The survey shows meagre income from timber and poles, but is likely to underreport this source due to its illegal nature. Yet, when the likely incomes from illegal timber harvesting as estimated by other studies are compared with this study{\textquoteright}s comprehensive livelihood data, it is obvious that an imagined full implementation of the VPA would have limited impact on the majority of rural households. Rather than focusing on social safeguards to mitigate any perceived or real negative impacts in the short-term, policy makers in Ghana—and the donors supporting them—should focus on other aspects of the VPA, notably forest policy reforms and in particular reforms that devolve management rights and benefits to trees on farm and fallow land to those occupying and cultivating the land. Such efforts would provide incentive for timber production and thus enhance rural livelihoods, while combatting illegal logging, deforestation and forest degradation.",
author = "Hansen, {Christian Pilegaard} and Mari{\`e}ve Pouliot and Emmanuel Marfo and Obiri, {Beatrice D.} and Thorsten Treue",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1007/s11842-015-9295-9",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "401--422",
journal = "Small-scale Forestry",
issn = "1873-7617",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Forests, timber and rural livelihoods

T2 - implications for social safeguards in the Ghana-EU voluntary partnership agreement

AU - Hansen, Christian Pilegaard

AU - Pouliot, Mariève

AU - Marfo, Emmanuel

AU - Obiri, Beatrice D.

AU - Treue, Thorsten

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - Based on detailed income data of 478 rural households, the nexus between forest, trees and rural livelihoods in Ghana is investigated and applied to assess implications of the Voluntary Partnership Agreement (VPA) between the EU and Ghana on illegal logging. It is found that, after crops, environmental income (cash and subsistence) is the most important contributor to households’ total yearly net income. Fuelwood, bushmeat and wild foods from plants are the most important environmental products. The survey shows meagre income from timber and poles, but is likely to underreport this source due to its illegal nature. Yet, when the likely incomes from illegal timber harvesting as estimated by other studies are compared with this study’s comprehensive livelihood data, it is obvious that an imagined full implementation of the VPA would have limited impact on the majority of rural households. Rather than focusing on social safeguards to mitigate any perceived or real negative impacts in the short-term, policy makers in Ghana—and the donors supporting them—should focus on other aspects of the VPA, notably forest policy reforms and in particular reforms that devolve management rights and benefits to trees on farm and fallow land to those occupying and cultivating the land. Such efforts would provide incentive for timber production and thus enhance rural livelihoods, while combatting illegal logging, deforestation and forest degradation.

AB - Based on detailed income data of 478 rural households, the nexus between forest, trees and rural livelihoods in Ghana is investigated and applied to assess implications of the Voluntary Partnership Agreement (VPA) between the EU and Ghana on illegal logging. It is found that, after crops, environmental income (cash and subsistence) is the most important contributor to households’ total yearly net income. Fuelwood, bushmeat and wild foods from plants are the most important environmental products. The survey shows meagre income from timber and poles, but is likely to underreport this source due to its illegal nature. Yet, when the likely incomes from illegal timber harvesting as estimated by other studies are compared with this study’s comprehensive livelihood data, it is obvious that an imagined full implementation of the VPA would have limited impact on the majority of rural households. Rather than focusing on social safeguards to mitigate any perceived or real negative impacts in the short-term, policy makers in Ghana—and the donors supporting them—should focus on other aspects of the VPA, notably forest policy reforms and in particular reforms that devolve management rights and benefits to trees on farm and fallow land to those occupying and cultivating the land. Such efforts would provide incentive for timber production and thus enhance rural livelihoods, while combatting illegal logging, deforestation and forest degradation.

U2 - 10.1007/s11842-015-9295-9

DO - 10.1007/s11842-015-9295-9

M3 - Journal article

VL - 14

SP - 401

EP - 422

JO - Small-scale Forestry

JF - Small-scale Forestry

SN - 1873-7617

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 146736872