NEGOTIATIONS
FOCUS
PROCESS
KEY STEPS
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REDD Web Platform: Monitoring Matters Network
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At the
heart of REDD: a role for local people in monitorin forests? (173 kB)
REDD+ implementation challenges include linking remote
sensing and national forest inventories of carbon stocks, to local implementation and measuring
carbon loss from forest degradation. Community-based forest monitoring can help overcome these
challenges. This analysis shows that local people can collect forest condition data of comparable
quality to trained scientists, at half the cost. Empowering communities to own and monitor carbon
stocks could provide a rapid and cost-effective way of absorbing carbon dioxide emissions, while
potentially contributing to local livelihoods and forest biodiversity conservation.
Environmental monitoring: the scale and speed of implementation varies according to the degree of
peoples involvement (484 kB)
Solutions to the global environmental crisis require scientific knowledge and responses spanning
different spatial scales and levels of societal organization; yet understanding how to translate
environmental knowledge into decision-making and action remains limited. This analysis examined 104
published environmental monitoring schemes to assess whether participation in data collection and
analysis influences the speed and scale of decision-making and action. The results show that
involving local stakeholders in monitoring enhances management responses at local spatial scales,
and increases the speed of decision-making to tackle environmental challenges at operational levels
of resource management.
Local
Participation in Natural Resource Monitoring – A Characterization of Approaches (771
kB)
No system exists to guide the development and expansion of natural resource monitoring schemes. To
help develop such a protocol, the authors present a typology of monitoring categories, defined by
their degree of local participation, ranging from no local involvement with monitoring undertaken
by professional researchers to an entirely local effort with monitoring undertaken by local people.
The strengths and weaknesses of each monitoring category are assessed. Locally based monitoring can
lead to rapid decisions to solve the key threats affecting natural resources, can empower local
communities to better manage their resources, and can refine sustainable-use strategies to improve
local livelihoods.
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