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Priority Issues

Food, Fuel, Fiber and Forest

Exclusion & Inclusion of Women in the Forest Sector

Free, Prior, and Informed Consent

Investing in Locally Controlled Forestry

Forests and Climate

Forests and Poverty Reduction

Intensively Managed Planted Forests

Genetically Modified Trees

Forests and Biodiversity Conservation

Small Forests Owners and Sustainable Forest Practices

Illegal Logging

REDD+ Benefit Sharing

Forest Certification

Publications

Contact Information

The Forests Dialogue Secretariat
Yale University
360 Prospect Street
New Haven, CT 06511
USA

T +1 203 432 5966
F +1 203 432 3809
tfd@yale.edu

James Mayers
TFD Co-Leader

Carlos Roxo
TFD Co-Leader

Gary Dunning
Executive Director

The Forests Dialogue

Forests and Poverty Reduction

Forests and Poverty Reduction Overview

By some estimates, over a billion people in developing countries depend on forests for their livelihoods, yet commercial forestry—especially small-scale commercial forestry—has had limited impact on reducing poverty. High capital and technological requirements, insecurity of land tenure over long time frames, and the small size of many enterprises have inhibited commercial wood production from becoming a significant factor in local economic growth. TFD convened a series of dialogues from 2006 to 2008 to explore so-called “pro-poor” commercial forestry, initiatives by governments, businesses, and others aimed at raising rural incomes through sustainable commercial forestry.

Street, W and S Price. 2009
TFD Review: Advancing Poverty Reduction & Rural Livelihoods Through Sustainable Commercial Forestry (English)
TFD Reporte Final: Avanzando la Reducción de la Pobreza y el Sustento Rural a través del Manejo Forestal Sustentable
(español)