Annals of Forest Research (May 2013)

Governance of private forests in Eastern and Central Europe: An analysis of forest harvesting and management rights

  • Laura Bouriaud,
  • Liviu Nichiforel,
  • G. Weiss,
  • Agron Bajraktari,
  • Milic Curovic,
  • Zuzana Dobsinska,
  • Predrag Glavonjic,
  • Vilém Jarský,
  • Zuzana Sarvasova,
  • Meelis Teder,
  • Zinta Zalite

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 56, no. 1
pp. 199 – 215

Abstract

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A property rights-based approach is proposed in the paper to underlinethe common characteristics of the forest property rights specificationin ten ECE countries, the specific patterns governing the harvesting of timber in private forestry and the role of the forest management planning in determining the content of the property rights. The analysis deals with the private forests of the individuals (non industrial ownership) from ten countries, covering 7.3 million ha and producing yearly some 25 million timber. The study shows that the forest management rights in private forests belong to the State and that the withdrawal rights on timber, yet recognized in the forest management plans, are in reality strongly restricted from aneconomic viewpoint. The forest management planning is the key instrument of the current forest governance system, based on top-down, hierarchically imposed and enforced set of compulsory rules on timber harvesting. With few exceptions, the forest owners’ have little influence in the forest planning and harvesting. The rational and State-lead approach of the private forest management has serious implications not only on the economic content of the property rights, but also on the learning and adaptive capacity of private forestry to cope with current challenges such the climate change, the increased industry needs for wood as raw material, or the marketingof innovative non wood forest products and services. The study highlights that understanding and comparing the regime of the forest ownership require a special analysis of the economic rights attached to each forest attribute; and that the evolution towards more participatory decision-making in the local forest governance can not be accurately assessed in ECE region without a proper understanding of the forest management planning process.

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