
Annual World Bank Conference on Land and Poverty
Forest Tenure Impact Evaluation Workshop April 21, 2011
The Environment for Development initiative arranged a Forest Tenure Impact Evaluation Workshop in connection to the World Bank’s annual conference on land and poverty in Washington D.C. on April 18-20. Recent developments in forest management institutions in Ethiopia, Kenya and Tanzania were reviewed during this workshop, and a potential impact evaluation program for forest tenure reform in East Africa was discussed. The workshop was held on Thursday April 21 and was open for all conference participants. EfD researchers and other international experts presented an analytical framework for the interaction between forest policy and the responses by villagers, as well as empirical examples of such responses in terms of impacts on forest values, private tree plantations and energy use. Based on previous experiences from impact evaluations, a potential impact evaluation program for forest tenure reform in East Africa was discussed. “Current and future forest tenure reforms hold a lot of promise in terms of improved forest quality, improved governance, empowerment of local institutions etc. However, we also know that the impact is likely to vary greatly depending on the design and implementation of these reforms. Economics has some powerful tools to help in the evaluation of interventions and although we have already done a lot, I am confident that we can contribute even more in the future.” says EfD Director Gunnar Köhlin. Please find all presentations below: 9.00 Opening: Daniel Ayalew: The potential for economic analysis to support land reform processes with examples from World Bank project implementation and research
Peter Dewees: Why forest and tree tenure matters - Managing rural landscapes for greater sustainability
Keijiro Otsuka: Evaluating natural resource management implications of forest tenure reforms
Gunnar Köhlin: EfD research on forest reform and plans for a program to build capacity, design and evaluate forest sector reforms 10.00 Evolution of forest management institutions in East Africa Godius Kahyarara: The evolution of the forest sector reform in Tanzania Anders Ekbom: The role of Institutional change for successful forest management on common lands; Lessons learned from an evaluation of Kenya’s forest sector reform 10.45 Responses to forest management Elizabeth Robinson: The interaction of demand, distance, degradation, and deterrence: An analytical framework of how villagers react to forest management and implications for forest policyAlemu Mekonnen: Household Forest Values Under Varying Management Regimes in Ethiopia Wilfred Nyangena: Towards an Understandingof the Implications of Forest Management Reforms in East Africa 11.30 Next steps: Design issues for forest tenure impact evaluation Jintao Xu: Experiences from design and implementation of evaluation of the Chinese forest tenure reform Erin Sills: Experiences from meta-analysis of REDD+ projects: lessons for impact evaluations Subhrendu Pattanayak: Rough guide to impact evaluation: from correlation to causation Gunnar Köhlin: The potential for a long-term impact evaluation program in East Africa Peter Dewees: Modalities for impact evaluation of forest sector reform The World Bank’s annual conference on land and poverty was held in Washington D.C. this year on April 18-20. The agenda and other information was made available on a dedicated website. |