Transformative governance for linking forest and landscape restoration to human well-being in Latin America

Autores

Aguiar, Sebastián, Mastrangelo, Matias Enrique, Brancalion, Pedro H.S. & Meli, Paula

Publicado en

Ecosystems and People, 17:1, 523-538

Año de publicación

2021

Afiliaciones

Laboratorio de Análisis Regional y Teledetección, IFEVA, Facultad de Agronomía, CONICET, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Cátedra de Dasonomía, Departamento de Producción Vegetal, Facultad de Agronomía, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Grupo de Estudio de Agroecosistemas y Paisajes Rurales (GEAP), Unidad Integrada Balcarce (Inta &ndash Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata), CONICET, Balcarce, Argentina
Department of Forest Sciences, &ldquoLuiz de Queiroz&rdquo College of Agriculture, University of São Paulo, Piracicaba, SP, Brazil
Departamento de Ciencias Forestales, Universidad de la Frontera, Temuco, Chile

Programa

FONDECYT to PM [Project 11191021],
Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research (IAI) Grant Award Number SGPHW 090
CONICET which provided funding through a postdoctoral scholarship to SA and a researcher position to MEM.

Proyecto

SGPHW-090

Keywords

DEGRADATION, ECOSYSTEM SERVICES, ELIANE CECCON, FOREST RESTORATION, LARGE-SCALE RESTORATION, LIVELIHOODS, REFORESTATION, social-ecological systems, TREE PLANTING

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1080/26395916.2021.1976838

Resumen

Tree planting and reforestation are currently in the spotlight as strategies for solving global environmental degradation. Many ongoing large-scale initiatives have proposed restoring millions of hectares and planting a trillion trees to solve climate change and biodiversity loss. Forest and landscape restoration (FLR) is one of the approaches most frequently employed to support these initiatives. Currently, many FLR initiatives are implemented in developing countries through a top-down approach, not fully anchored to the social-ecological characteristics of landscapes (e.g. land use and tenure, values of local peoples, local livelihoods), and sometimes relegating human well-being to a secondary concern. Therefore, issues of social equity and legitimacy might hamper the effectiveness of FLR initiatives and projects regarding their environmental outcomes. In this perspective article, we present four challenges to better link FLR and human well-being in Latin America: (1) the high dependence of local communities and countries&rsquo economies on natural resources, (2) conflicts over land tenure and access, (3) divergence in perceptions and values, and (4) the fragility of public institutions and policies. After describing these interrelated challenges, we discuss how to tackle them by implementing instruments and approaches recently organized under the concept of transformative governance. Finding an equitable and legitimate balance between global interests and urgency and increasing local well-being is the main challenge of FLR in Latin America, for which transformative governance is critical.

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