A fine mess: Bricolaged forest governance in Cameroon

Authors

  • Verina Ingram CIFOR and WUR
  • Mirjam A.F. Ros-Tonen University of Amsterdam
  • Ton Dietz Director, African Studies Centre, and Professor of Human Geography, University of Amsterdam

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18352/ijc.516

Keywords:

Forest governance, livelihoods, institutions, value chains, non-timber forest products, Cameroon, bricolage

Abstract

Value chains of Cameroonian non-timber forest products move through harvesters, processors and traders, to consumers locally and worldwide. This paper characterises six governance arrangements governing eight such chains: statutory and customary regulations, voluntary market-based systems, international conventions, project-based systems and corruption. Governance is messy with overlapping, multiple layers of institutions and actors. There are voids where no institutions govern access to resources and markets; some actors fulfil roles normally the reserve of the state. In some chains the state performs its duties, in others not, and other institutions fill the gaps. To negotiate this complexity, many actors have become adept ‘bricoleurs'. They make the best of the arrangements in which they find themselves, and creatively use capitals available, building on natural capital to construct new governance arrangements and/or remould existing ones to meet their current objectives, circumstances and livelihoods. This ‘fine mess’ makes examining the impacts on the livelihoods of participants and their sustainability challenging. A measure of governance intensity and extensive fieldwork was thus used. It indicates strong trade-offs between natural, social and economic capital, creating winners and losers. Trade-offs between livelihoods and sustainability are most acute either when there are no governance arrangements; when arrangements do not take account of the susceptibility of a species to harvesting; or when they do not balance supply and demand. Policy challenges and opportunities include recognising and dealing with pluralism; reconciling conflicting rules; hearing the voices of silent actors; learning from failures and raising chain visibility by recognising natural and  socio-economic values.

Author Biographies

Verina Ingram, CIFOR and WUR

Senior researcher, Sustainable markets & chains

Mirjam A.F. Ros-Tonen, University of Amsterdam

Assistant Professor, Dept. of Geography, Planning and International Development Studies and Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research / Governance and Inclusive Development Group (AISSR-GID)

Ton Dietz, Director, African Studies Centre, and Professor of Human Geography, University of Amsterdam

Amsterdam Institute of Social Science Research-Governance and Inclusive Development Group (AISSR-GID), Department of Human Geography, Planning and International Development Studies,

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Published

2015-03-16

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Section

Research articles

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