Legal timber: verification and governance in the forest sector
ISBN
978-0-85003-889-7978-9977-57-516-2
Date
2010Auteur
Brown, David
Schreckenberg, Kate
Bird, Neil
Cerutti, Paolo.
Gatto, Fillipo del.
Diaw, Chimere
Fomété, Tim
Luttrell, Cecilia
Navarro Monge, Guillermo
Oberndorf, Rob
Thiel, Hans
Wells, Adrian
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-location
Turrialba, San José
Type
Libro
Metadata
Afficher la notice complèteAlternative title
Madera legal: verificación y gobernanza en el sector forestal
Description
También disponible en español con el título: Madera legal: verificación y gobernanza en el sector forestal. Publicado por CATIE
Résumé
This book investigates a topical issue in international forest policy development: how to verify the legality of timber sold on regional and international markets in ways that will satisfy both the interests of producer states and the demands of consumers. This seemingly straightforward and technical matter is in fact complex and political. It addresses a critical interface in inter-governmental relations, where producer states’ rights of ownership are defended with considerable tenacity. While at one level the subject matter of this book is forest sector-specific, it touches on much broader issues about the balance between sovereign state control and the international stewardship of global public goods, illegality as a dimension of poor governance, and mechanisms of national and international public accountability. ed in this book, is a response to an important level of doubt over the functioning of the normal system of forest control, and involves two key aspects of ‘additionality’ to address this doubt: first, developing and implementing a set of additional measures to test and validate claims about legal compliance in the forest sector, and second, bringing in an additional set of actors from outside the forest sector, to help strengthen the credibility of these new measures and the accountability of those charged with implementing them. The overall conclusion that gradually emerges is that, to be effective in the situations that are typical of tropical producer states, the control of illegal logging cannot be addressed solely as a problem of criminality nor engineered entirely by external parties. It has, rather, to be positioned within a wider and well-embedded process of governance reform.
Keywords
Éditeur
Centro Agronómico Tropical de Investigación y Enseñanza (CATIE)
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