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Community natural resource management: the case of woodlots in Northern Ethiopia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 January 2003

Berhanu Gebremedhin
Affiliation:
International Livestock Research Institute, P.O.Box 5689, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Tel. 251–1–463215. Fax: 251–1–461252. E-mail: b.gebremedhin@cgiar.org
John Pender
Affiliation:
International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC.
Girmay Tesfay
Affiliation:
Mekelle University, P.O. Box 231, Mekelle, Ethiopia.

Abstract

This paper examines the nature of community management of woodlots and investigates the determinants of collective action and its effectiveness in managing woodlots, based on a survey of 100 villages in Tigray, northern Ethiopia. Despite limited current benefits received by community members, the woodlots contribute substantially to community wealth, increasing members' willingness to provide collective effort to manage the woodlots. We find that benefits are greater and problems less on woodlots managed at the village level than those managed at a higher municipality level, and that the average intensity of management is greater on village-managed woodlots. The factors that do significantly affect collective action include population density (higher collective labor input and lower planting density at intermediate than at low or high density), market access (less labor input, planting density and tree survival where market access is better), and presence of external organizations promoting the woodlot (reduces local effort to protect the woodlot and tree survival). The finding of an inverse U-shaped relationship between population density and collective labor input is consistent with induced innovation theory, with the increased labor/land ratio promoting collective effort to invest in resources as population density grows to a moderate level, while incentive problems may undermine collective action at high levels of population density. These findings suggest collective action may be more beneficial and more effective when managed at a more local level, when the role of external organizations is more demand-driven, and when promoted in intermediate population density communities more remote from markets. In higher population density settings and areas closer to markets, private-oriented approaches are likely to be more effective.

Type
Theory and Applications
Copyright
© 2003 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

We gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation. We also thank Mekelle University College for institutional support during the field work, and the Tigray Regional Bureau of Agriculture and Natural Resource Development and the Tigray Regional Bureau of Planning and Economic Development for logistical support and collaboration in the work. We are especially grateful to the many officials and farmers who patiently responded to our many questions. The usual disclaimer applies.