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Tenure reform and perceived food security in Indonesia: An exploratory study

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Title Tenure reform and perceived food security in Indonesia: An exploratory study
 
Creator Liswanti, N.
Kirby, D.
Tamara, A.
Juniwaty, K.S.
Mwangi, E.
 
Subject tenure systems
food security
indigenous people
 
Description Land and forest tenure reform has been expanding globally, increasingly with the aim of improving the livelihoods and food security of indigenous people and local communities through securing forest access. In Indonesia, legal rights for local communities to access and manage state forests were partially recognised in 1999. Social forestry only started to advance in 2014, however, following the government’s pledge to transfer the management of 12.7 million ha of forest to forest-dependent communities. Evaluating the impact of these forest tenure reforms on local communities’ food security is critical to understanding the effectiveness of the reforms.
 
Date 2021-12-24
2022-01-20T06:21:18Z
2022-01-20T06:21:18Z
 
Type Brief
 
Identifier Liswanti, N., Kirby, D., Tamara, A., Juniwaty, K.S., Mwangi, E. 2021. Tenure reform and perceived food security in Indonesia: An exploratory study. CIFOR Infobrief 357. Bogor, Indonesia. Center for International Forestry Research. https://doi.org/10.17528/cifor/008380
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/117595
https://www.cifor.org/library/8380
https://doi.org/10.17528/cifor/008380
 
Language en
 
Relation CIFOR Infobrief
 
Rights CC-BY-4.0
Open Access
 
Publisher Center for International Forestry Research