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Policy briefLegal assessment brief in the framework of sustainable land management, sustainable forest management and climate smart agriculture in Myanmar 2021
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No results found.This brief has been prepared in the framework of the Project “Sustainable Cropland and Forest Management in Priority Agro-Ecosystems of Myanmar” (hereinafter ‘the Project’). The Project revolves around three key concepts that inform the adoption of related approaches to be promoted in Myanmar: Sustainable Land Management (SLM); Sustainable Forest Management (SFM), including Community Based Forest Management (CBFM); and Climate-Smart Agriculture (CSA). In this regard, and considering that Output C1A of the Project´s aim is to support the development of a more enabling legal framework for SLM, CSA, and SFM in Myanmar, this brief aims to build on the ongoing policy debates in these areas, as well as on the work and experiences of the Project in the past 3 years, to contribute with suggestions and recommendations on how to enhance mechanisms leading to the mentioned policy goals. Additional support to this process was provided by the FAO-EU FIRST policy facilitation partnership. -
MeetingSpecial Session: Implementing Sustainable Forest Management: The search for excellence in sustainable forest management in Latin America and the Caribbean
Latin America and Caribbean Commission, Twenty-Fourth Session, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, 26-30 June 2006
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DocumentStrengthening Forest Management Unit for Sustainable Forest Management and Community Empowerment - TCP/INS/3602 2019
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No results found.Indonesian forests are home to some of the mostbiologically diverse forests in the world. The total forestarea in the country is 124 million ha.Forests play a critical role in community welfare. As such,the Government promotes the use and management offorest resources to support national development goalsin a manner that is environmentally sustainable,economically viable and socially equitable.To date, deforestation, illegal logging, forestencroachment and forest fires have been a majorproblem in the forestry sector. According to FAO’sGlobal Forest Resources Assessment 2015, the rate ofdeforestation remains alarmingly high. It was reportedthat Indonesia underwent annual forest loss of684 000 ha between 2010 and 2015, a figure secondonly to Brazil in terms of the rate of annual forestreduction in the last five years.
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