Widespread
mining and complex tenure arrangements overlay, and sometimes further
undermine, efforts to design long-vision resource management plans.
With
the aim to address these issues, the
Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) has launched two new
projects to support collaborative and multi-stakeholder approaches to landscape
planning in Ghana.
Presented
during an event held at the Global Landscapes Forum in Accra, these initiatives will
operationalize the landscape approach and support better governance.
The
first project, Operationalizing the Landscape Approach for Biodiversity
Benefit: Policy, Practice and People (COLANDS) is expected to close the
gap between strong scientific theory about landscape approaches and weak
implementation.
“This
is a pioneering program, as its five-year time frame means that we can
establish a long-term engagement by facilitating the use of landscape
approaches, observing stakeholders – especially people living in these
landscapes – and then reporting on the results”, said James Reed, CIFOR
Scientist.
COLANDS
aims to capture successful elements of landscape approaches to develop a
scalable model for adoption elsewhere.
The second project, Governing
Multifunctional Landscapes (GML)
takes an alternative, jurisdictional approach to landscape governance at
agro-commodity and resource frontiers.
“We are working through partnerships
to mobilize multi-stakeholder platforms and negotiate jurisdictional priorities
for forest protection and climate-smart agriculture for multiple commodities,
including cocoa, oil palm, citrus, and rubber”, explained Emily Gallagher,
CIFOR Scientist.
GML will convene platforms in two
jurisdictions adjoining the Atewa Range Forest Reserves in southeastern Ghana:
Kwaebibirem Municipality and Atiwa West District to build the business case and
action pathways for climate-smart development.
COLANDS
is part of the International Climate Initiative (IKI) and is funded by the
German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear
Safety (BMU). GML is funded by the Directorate General for International
Cooperation and Development from the European Commission (DG DEVCO).
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