Biodiversity and Local Perceptions on the Edge of a Conservation Area, Khe Tran Village, Vietnam.
Boissière, M.; Basuki, I.; Koponen, P.; Wan, M.; Sheil, D. 2006. CIFOR, Bogor, Indonesia.
Abstract:
Decisions on land use in Vietnam are often only based on biophysical and
economical assessments, with little consideration for the local people’s
opinions or perspectives. This can lead to conflicts over natural resources
management, unsustainable land use and decisions that are unfair to local
people. In the landscape surrounding Khe Tran, a village in Central Vietnam
lives a Pahy minority group. The driving force in this area has been
different land use policies, resulting mainly from a government ‘top down’
approach, and the consequent changes in local forest status.
The major activities for local livelihoods have shifted from swidden
agriculture and high dependency on natural forests, to more sedentary
activities. Khe Tran is now situated in the buffer zone of a planned nature
reserve and the government has encouraged the villagers to plant economic
crops in the bare hills around the village. The people’s dependence on
forest resources has significantly decreased, and most of the local
knowledge about natural forests may soon be lost. The main land covers
around the village are now Acacia and rubber plantations, bare lands, and
lands for agriculture.
Local knowledge and perspectives are rarely taken into account by state
institutions when implementing land allocation projects or making decisions
on natural resource management and land use at the landscape level. There is
opportunity to better inform development agencies and involve local level
stakeholders so that more sustainable decisions can be made. This book
reports on what Khe Tran villagers find important in terms of environmental
services and resources in their landscape. Our approach integrates
multidisciplinary activities - through human and natural sciences- and
explains the relative importance of landscape components, products and
species for local people. It aims to better articulate local people’s
priorities for the future, their hopes and values as well as their
relationship with the conservation area.
Download PDF: Vietnam Report.pdf
(2.2 MB)
|