For better or for worse?: local impacts of the decentralization of Indonesia’s forest sector

Palmer, C.ORCID logo & Engel, S. (2007). For better or for worse?: local impacts of the decentralization of Indonesia’s forest sector. World Development, 35(12), 2131-2149. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2007.02.004
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This paper quantifies the local impacts of mechanized logging on forest-dependent communities in Indonesia, before and after decentralization. A conceptual framework incorporates financial, social, enforcement, rent-seeking, and environmental impacts. Using data from 60 communities in East Kalimantan, the empirical results suggest that significantly more households received financial and in-kind benefits after decentralization compared to before. Many communities engaged in self-enforcement activities against firms both before and after decentralization. Post-decentralization, a significantly higher proportion of households perceived community forest ownership. There were few significant differences in perceived environmental impacts. Little evidence exists of a post-decentralization trade-off between environmental and financial contractual provisions.

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