Focusing on facilitation: Issues and challenges of capacity development in Indonesia’s social forestry reforms

Main Author: Galudra, Gamma
Other Authors: RECOFTC and AWG-SF as part of the project entitled the ASEAN-Swiss Partnership on Social Forestry and Climate Change (ASFCC), funded by the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC
Format: Article info application/pdf eJournal
Bahasa: eng
Terbitan: Forestry Faculty, Universitas Hasanuddin , 2019
Subjects:
Online Access: http://journal.unhas.ac.id/index.php/fs/article/view/5995
http://journal.unhas.ac.id/index.php/fs/article/view/5995/pdf
ctrlnum article-5995
fullrecord <?xml version="1.0"?> <dc schemaLocation="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc.xsd"><title lang="en-US">Focusing on facilitation: Issues and challenges of capacity development in Indonesia&#x2019;s social forestry reforms</title><creator>Galudra, Gamma</creator><subject lang="en-US">biodiversity; conservation planning; indigenous peoples; policy</subject><description lang="en-US">As the Indonesian government sets a target to allocate 12.7 million ha of state forest land for social forestry in 2019, one of the most crucial [and overlooked] issues is the extent of capacity, knowledge, skills, and engagement of social forestry facilitators and the extension workers that support the government in meeting their targets on social forestry. In this short paper, I seek to reorient the discussion towards the main issues and challenges of social forestry capacity development in Indonesia. On the one hand, there are some promising achievements made by the government in the wake of social forestry policy design and implementation, particularly in their ability to expand the scope of targeted areas for social forestry designation, as well as the increase in the numbers of community business group established. On the other hand, however, there are some challenges that are evident. Coordination within the ministry remains a major barrier, and extends to coordination problems across and between sub-national governments. Furthermore, engagement with the private sectors and involvement of NGOs remains lacking. And finally, the distribution of social forestry facilitators and extension workers across the numerous social forestry sites in Indonesia, as well as the overall capacity development needs among facilitators continues to be a major hindrance in meeting targets. I conclude by highlighting that more attention needs to be devoted to the role and capacity of facilitators, and furthermore, that the government needs to address these challenges through various institutional reforms and methods on social forestry training, as well as developing more rigorous training modules for community facilitators.</description><publisher lang="en-US">Forestry Faculty, Universitas Hasanuddin</publisher><contributor lang="en-US">RECOFTC and AWG-SF as part of the project entitled the ASEAN-Swiss Partnership on Social Forestry and Climate Change (ASFCC), funded by the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC</contributor><date>2019-04-25</date><type>Journal:Article</type><type>Other:info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion</type><type>Other:</type><type>Other:</type><type>File:application/pdf</type><identifier>http://journal.unhas.ac.id/index.php/fs/article/view/5995</identifier><identifier>10.24259/fs.v3i1.5995</identifier><source lang="en-US">Forest and Society; VOLUME 3 ISSUE 1, APRIL 2019; 133-136</source><source>2549-4333</source><source>2549-4724</source><language>eng</language><relation>http://journal.unhas.ac.id/index.php/fs/article/view/5995/pdf</relation><coverage lang="en-US">Indonesia</coverage><coverage lang="en-US"/><coverage lang="en-US"/><rights lang="en-US">Copyright (c) 2019 Forest and Society</rights><rights lang="en-US">http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0</rights><recordID>article-5995</recordID></dc>
language eng
format Journal:Article
Journal
Other:info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Other
Other:
File:application/pdf
File
Journal:eJournal
author Galudra, Gamma
author2 RECOFTC and AWG-SF as part of the project entitled the ASEAN-Swiss Partnership on Social Forestry and Climate Change (ASFCC), funded by the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC
title Focusing on facilitation: Issues and challenges of capacity development in Indonesia’s social forestry reforms
publisher Forestry Faculty, Universitas Hasanuddin
publishDate 2019
topic biodiversity
conservation planning
indigenous peoples
policy
url http://journal.unhas.ac.id/index.php/fs/article/view/5995
http://journal.unhas.ac.id/index.php/fs/article/view/5995/pdf
contents As the Indonesian government sets a target to allocate 12.7 million ha of state forest land for social forestry in 2019, one of the most crucial [and overlooked] issues is the extent of capacity, knowledge, skills, and engagement of social forestry facilitators and the extension workers that support the government in meeting their targets on social forestry. In this short paper, I seek to reorient the discussion towards the main issues and challenges of social forestry capacity development in Indonesia. On the one hand, there are some promising achievements made by the government in the wake of social forestry policy design and implementation, particularly in their ability to expand the scope of targeted areas for social forestry designation, as well as the increase in the numbers of community business group established. On the other hand, however, there are some challenges that are evident. Coordination within the ministry remains a major barrier, and extends to coordination problems across and between sub-national governments. Furthermore, engagement with the private sectors and involvement of NGOs remains lacking. And finally, the distribution of social forestry facilitators and extension workers across the numerous social forestry sites in Indonesia, as well as the overall capacity development needs among facilitators continues to be a major hindrance in meeting targets. I conclude by highlighting that more attention needs to be devoted to the role and capacity of facilitators, and furthermore, that the government needs to address these challenges through various institutional reforms and methods on social forestry training, as well as developing more rigorous training modules for community facilitators.
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institution Universitas Hasanuddin
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collection Forest and Society
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subject_area Forest Resources, Jungles/Sumber Daya Hutan
social forestry
forest politics
forest economics
city KOTA MAKASSAR
province SULAWESI SELATAN
repoId IOS5145
first_indexed 2019-05-08T07:50:10Z
last_indexed 2020-03-24T06:19:08Z
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