Forest and Society (Jun 2024)

When Policies Problematize the Local: Social-Environmental Justice and Forest Policies in Burkina Faso and Vietnam

  • Grace Yee Wong,
  • Mawa Karambiri,
  • Thu Thuy Pham,
  • Alizée Ville,
  • Tuan Long Hoang,
  • Chi Dao Thi Linh,
  • Andrea Downing,
  • Amanda Jiménez-Aceituno,
  • Maria Brockhaus

DOI
https://doi.org/10.24259/fs.v8i1.34276
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1

Abstract

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We examine social-environmental justice in forest governance by asking who is problematized as drivers of deforestation and forest degradation. We adapt Bacchi’s “What is the problem represented to be” approach to the community forest (CAF) model in Burkina Faso and the Payment for Forest Environmental Services (PFES) in Vietnam and examine the implementation of these policies in specific sites through disaggregated focus group discussions (men, women, youth, ethnic minorities). We delve into the discursive, lived and subjectification effects of the policies’ problematizations, highlighting tensions and contestations relating to forest access and benefits. For both countries, what is left unproblematized in the implicit policy focus on the local is a “communal fix” of indigeneity tied to idealized and collective governance of fixed areas of land and exclusionary processes for those that do not fit the ideal. We argue that market-oriented approach in policies such as CAF and PFES absent of the wider underpinnings of the political and historical forest will only exacerbate social-environmental injustices.

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