Open Access
Reforming Tree Regulation and Associated Policies in Leyte, The Philippines
Steve Harrison,Eduardo O. Mangaoang,John L. Herbohn,Edilberto E. Nasayao +3 more
- 01 Jan 2007
- Vol. 1, pp 185-196
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the potential for reform of policies for tree registration and harvest and transport approval on Leyte Island in the Philippines and identified a number of constraints on tree registration, including lack of knowledge about the regulations by farmers and even government agencies.
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Abstract: Filipino tree farmers are required by law to register their planted trees in order obtain harvest and transport approvals and thus allow them to sell timber. However, survey evidence reveals that only a small proportion of tree farmers register their trees. Also, while the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) encourages tree registration at the time of planting, in most cases when trees are registered this only occurs soon before harvesting. The current tree registration system appears to discourage smallholder timber production, with Leyte smallholders mostly growing timber for on-farm use, or receiving lower prices because they sell timber locally without registration, or being captive to timber merchants who carry out the registration procedures for them but pay low log prices. The DENR lacks of tree inventory information for planning purposes. One of the research objectives of ACIAR Research Project ASEM/2003/052 is to examine the potential for reform of policies for tree registration and harvest and transport approval on Leyte Island in the Philippines. The project has identified a number of constraints on tree registration, including lack of knowledge about the regulations by farmers and even government agencies, complexity of the regulations and charges which are sometimes imposed to cover the costs of DENR field staff in carrying out plot inventories. There are large differences in the registration rate between Community Environment and Natural Resource Office districts, and a study of differences in implementation arrangements between CENRO districts provides insights into measures to increase compliance. A critical assessment is required of the role of tree registration and associated regulations in designing policy reforms. In particular, streamlined tree registration procedures potentially offer smallholders the opportunity to obtain higher returns for their timber.
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Citations
6. a robust growth model for smallholder tree plantations
Jerome K. Vanclay
- 01 Jan 2009
TL;DR: This paper presented a series of robust functions able to be calibrated with sparse data, and integrated into a simple spreadsheet-based smallholder plantation growth model designed to assist silvicultural decisions in smallholder plantations.
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Seeing the forest beyond the trees: new possibilities and expectations for products and services from small-scale forestry. Proceedings of the 2009 IUFRO 3.08 Small-Scale Forestry Symposium, Morgantown, West Virginia, USA, 7-11 June, 2009.
K. Piatek,B. Spong,Steve Harrison,D. McGill +3 more
- 01 Jan 2009
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyze the transformation of environmental public administration using a model representing three different perspectives on administration's role, values and meaning, showing state action's progressive transition from "rowing" to "steering" and facilitating.
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Participatory evaluation of sustainability of farming systems in the Philippines
Sonja Vilei
- 25 Jan 2011
TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted a focus group discussion with farmers in the Western side of the island of Leyte to discuss the issues of success and sustainability of their farming systems and identify and rank possible criteria for an evaluation of sustainability.
Adoptability of a complex agro-forestry project for smallholders on a Philippine island.
S. Vilei,K. Piatek,B. Spong,Steve Harrison,D. McGill +4 more
- 01 Jan 2009
TL;DR: The Rainforestation Farming (RF) project was developed in the Baybay area of The Philippines as a Philippine-German co-operation and is based on the use of indigenous trees in contrast to the predominant use of exotic timber trees in commercial tree planting as mentioned in this paper.
References
An Investigation of the Social and Economic Factors Affecting the Development of Small-Scale Forestry By Rural Households in Leyte Province, Philippines: A Typology of Rural Households in Relation to Small-Scale Forestry
Nicholas F. Emtage
- 01 Aug 2004
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the social and economic factors affecting small-scale forestry development in Leyte Province, the Philippines, and in particular, the potential to use typologies of rural households to aid the description and interpretation of the diversity of households in relation to forestry development.
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ACIAR Smallholder Forestry Project ASEM/2003/052 Improving Financial Returns to Smallholder Tree Farmers in the Philippines Proceedings from the ACIAR Project Planning Workshop Held in Ormoc City, the Philippines 15-17 February 2005
Jungho Suh,Steve Harrison,John L. Herbohn,Eduardo O. Mangaoang,Jerry Vanclay +4 more
- 01 Jan 2005
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DENR Rules and Regulations Governing Timber and Timber Products Planted on Private Land
Felipe Calub
- 01 Jan 2005
TL;DR: A clearly defined set of regulations applies nationally to the harvest and disposition of trees planted in private land as mentioned in this paper, and some differences in regulations exist between premium species and benguet pine as against other species including those commonly grown in plantations.
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Property Rights Issues in Small-scale Forestry in the Philippines
Steve Harrison
- 01 Jan 2003
TL;DR: The system of property rights governs what landholders can do with their land and other resources and the incentives which exist to undertake tree growing activities in the forest sector, conditioned largely by the forest administration infrastructure, forestry funding arrangements and environmental policy as discussed by the authors.
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