Poverty-Forests Linkages Toolkit

Activity Type: 
Activities Related to Forest Livelihoods

CHALLENGE

An estimated 1.2 billion people rely on forests for some part of their livelihoods. However, the importance of forests is often overlooked in national development processes such as poverty reduction strategies due to inadequate evidence documenting how forests sustain the poor.

photo by Flore de Preneuf

 Creative Commons License
Poverty-Forests Linkages Toolkit by PROFOR (Program on Forests) is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.
Based on a work at
www.profor.info
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be obtained by emailing profor@worldbank.org.

 

APPROACH

To build better knowledge on this critical relationship, PROFOR developed a “Poverty-Forests Linkages Toolkit” to facilitate relevant data collection and analysis. The Toolkit was created in partnership with CIFOR, IUCN, ODI, and Winrock International, on the basis of case studies in Guinea, India, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Nepal, and Tanzania. 

The first draft of the Toolkit was completed in April 2007, and was based on piloting and field testing in three different locations in Indonesian Papua (highlands, lowlands and a mangrove area) and in Tanzania. A consortium of national level organizations led by the International Institute for Economic Development and the Center for International Development and Training carried out further pilots of the Toolkit in four African countries - Cameroon, Ghana, Madagascar and Uganda.

TOOLKIT

What the Poverty-Forest Linkages Toolkit Includes

Field Tools and their Purpose

Tool 1: Wealth Ranking   Tool 2: Local Landscape Situation Analysis   Tool 3: Timeline and Trends   Tool 4: Livelihoods Analysis
Purpose: Understand how poor households use and depend on forest resources Purpose: Understand how villagers use local resources Purpose: Record changes in forest resources, agriculture, local livelihood strategies and income Aim: Determine the cash and subsistence reliance on forests and the proportion of annual income from forests
Tool 5: Forests Problem and Solution Matrix  Tool 6: Trees and Forest Products Importance   Tool 7: Millennium Development Goals Chart   Tool 8: Monetary Values
Purpose: Identify and rank forest problems (related to policy, regulation or tenure/access) and suggest solutions Purpose: Rank forest products by importance for cash or subsistence use Purpose: to show the contribution of forests to the achievement of the MDGs Purpose: To express the contribution of forestry in monetary terms

RESULTS

  • After piloting was completed in 2008, PROFOR developed a field-compatible version of the toolkit and started providing training in its use. Over 50 World Bank staff and external participants were trained during the World Bank’s annual Sustainable Development Network Forum in March 2009. The toolkit was also disseminated at the XIII World Forestry Congress in October 2009. The training of a dozen National Forest Programme Facility coaches at FAO in February 2010 concluded PROFOR’s direct engagement with the toolkit and transferred product and skills to the NFP Facility for roll out in their country activities.
  • Ongoing PROFOR activities such as the study of desert cloud forests in Yemen and Oman are making use of the toolkit to collect relevant data and analyze the impact of overexploitation of natural resources and climate change on livelihoods.   

Last updated 06/18/2010