Community and Conservation: Forests and Wildlife Resources



Conservation strategies are not new in our country. We often ignore that in India, forests are also home to some of the traditional communities. In some areas of India, local communities are struggling to conserve these habitats along with government officials, recognizing that only this will secure their own long-term livelihood. In this blog on community and conservation, we will learn about the conservation strategies used by communities.

 

In Sariska Tiger Reserve, Rajasthan, villagers have fought against mining by citing the Wildlife Protection Act. In many areas, villagers themselves are protecting habitats and explicitly rejecting government involvement.

 

The inhabitants of five villages in the Alwar district of Rajasthan has declared 1,200 hectares of forest as the Bhairodev Dakav �Sonchuri�, declaring their own set of rules and regulations which do not allow hunting, and are protecting the wildlife against any outside encroachments

 

Community and Conservation: Chipko movement

 

The famous Chipko movement in the Himalayas has not only successfully resisted deforestation in several areas but has also shown that community afforestation with indigenous species can be enormously successful. Attempts to revive the traditional conservation methods or developing new methods of ecological farming are now widespread.

 

Farmers and citizen groups like the Beej Bachao Andolan in Tehri and Navdanya have shown that adequate levels of diversified crop production without the use of chemicals are possible and economically viable.

Community and Conservation: Joint Forest Management (JFM)

In India, the joint forest management (JFM) program furnishes a good example for
involving local communities in the management and restoration of degraded forests.

 

The program has been informal existence since 1988 when the state of Orissa passed the first resolution for joint forest management. JFM depends on the formation of local (village) institutions that undertake protection activities mostly on degraded forest land managed by the forest department.

 

In return, the members of these communities are entitled to intermediary benefits like non-timber the forest produces and share in the timber harvested by �successful protection�. The clear lesson from the dynamics of both environmental destruction and reconstruction in India is that local communities everywhere have to be involved in some kind of natural resource management.

 

But there is still a long way to go before local communities are at the center stage in decision-making. Accept only those economic or developmental activities, that are people-centric, environment-friendly, and economically rewarding.

 

Read More: Conservation of Wildlife and Forest in India - Forest and Wildlife Resources

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