New Journal Paper on "Beyond Ostrom: Randomized experiment of the impact of individualized tree rights on forest management in Ethiopia"

By Sarah Ephrida Tione

Forest in Ethiopia
Photo: Forest in Ethiopia

The paper "Beyond Ostrom: Randomized experiment of the impact of individualized tree rights on forest management in Ethiopia" written by Ryo Takahashi, Keijiro Otsuka, Mesfin Tilahun, Emiru Birhane and Stein Holden has been published in the World Development journal, February 2024.

The paper is published as a New Journal Paper and can be downloaded here. 

Abstract of the Paper 

We argue that while community forest management is effective in protecting forest resources, as argued by Ostrom, such management may fail to provide the proper incentives to nurture such resources because the benefits of forest management are collectively shared. This study proposes a mixed private and community management system characterized by communal protection of community-owned forest areas and individual management of individually owned trees as a desirable arrangement for timber forest management in developing countries. By conducting a randomized experiment in Ethiopia, we found that the mixed management system significantly stimulated intensive forest management activities, including pruning, guarding, and watering. Furthermore, more timber trees and forest products were extracted from the treated areas, which are byproducts of tree management (e.g., thinned trees and pruned branches). In contrast, the extracted volumes of non-timber forest products unrelated to tree management (fodder and honey) did not change with the intervention.

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