The International Forestry Resource and Institutions research program (IFRI) Ted Webb, National University of Singapore
Jun 08, 2015
The International Forestry Resource and Institutions research program (IFRI)
Ted Webb, National University of Singapore
What is IFRI? A long-term, interdisciplinary, international research network
Established in 1992; now coordinated by Arun Agrawal at University of Michigan
What is IFRI? A growing international database of cross-national,
time-series data on forests, the people using forest
resources, and institutions for managing resources
• How do alternative systems of governance and tenure affect social and ecological conditions?
• What conditions favor collective action for the provision of resource management?
• How do people respond to changing ecological and social conditions?
• How do diverse actors – user groups, local associations, governments, interact & jointly affect forest conditions?
IFRI’s Central Questions
Data required across space and
time
A
B
C
D
Sites (Users – Forests)
A
B
C
D
T I M E
S P
A C
E
Data collected at each site
Ca. 2000 data points on: • FOREST CONDITION
– Trees and shrubs – Forest extent and change over
time – Signs of illegal activities
• USERS AND GOVERNANCE
– Formal governance arrangement
– Organization of forest users – Activities of forest users COMMUNITY-LEVEL DATA
(not household)
IFRI Conceptual Model and relational database
ENTITY
ASSOCIATION
Data comparability is paramount
• Common data collection methods / forms
• Extensive joint training
• Multi-country teams whenever possible
• Repeat studies
• Extensive reporting to communities and relevant officials
Collaborating Research Centers
IFRI Master Database – Jan ’11
Visits per Site
Total Sites
1 161
2 54
3 23
4 2
Total Sites 346
**Planned interval between site revisits: 5 years**
Number of Site Visits by Country
Examples of what IFRI does best
• Examine forest governance evolution and change
• 1:1 User group : forest analysis, comparable over multiple sites and times
• Evaluate broad parameters of “forest condition”, “sustainability” and “outcomes”
What IFRI does not do
• Biodiversity monitoring aside from basic richness
• Single-species assessments
• Ecological research
• Economic valuation
• Landscape-level analysis
IFRI Forests: area distribution
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
Nu
mb
er o
f Fo
rest
s
Forest Area (ha)
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Nu
mb
er
of
Fore
sts
Forest Area (ha)
Most sites have ≤ 30 forest plots (expensive)
Tree plots = 10m radius
Sapling plots = 3 m radius
30 tree plots = 0.94 ha
30 sapling plots = 848 m2
IFRI in the context of Sentinel Landscapes
• The outputs of a sentinel landscape can include: – descriptions of a state or process; – basic data collection (for surveillance); – understanding of a phenomenon, including causality; and – experimentation, especially to provide recommendations, suggest
interventions and assess their efficiency (e.g., adaptive management).
• Researchers at sentinel landscapes can:
– provide information or data to stakeholders for its further use; – analyze the information recorded; – use the results of the observation and/or analysis for dissemination or
for further intervention; and – assist decision making by providing indicators and predictive modeling
tools.
Lessons from IFRI • Go slow: Years of up-front efforts are necessary. • Governance
– Network leadership and collaborator commitment – Streamlined, decentralized structure – Local engagement and feedback necessary for long-term
collaboration – Start small and grow within means around a core method
• Data – Comparability – Balance needed between breadth and depth of data
collected. Most frequent collaborator comment about IFRI: “Too much data collected. But can you add…..?”
• Research has been question-driven – Locally relevant and globally informative / comparable