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How policy interventions influence burning to meet cultural and small-scale livelihood objectives

Authors :
Cathy Smith
Jacob Ainscough
Rahinatu S Alare
Abigail R Croker
Kayla M De Freitas
James D.A. Millington
Jayalaxshmi Mistry
Ol Perkins
Kate Schreckenberg
Francisco Seijo
Henry J Thompson
Michel Valette
Kapil Yadav
Source :
Ecology and Society, Vol 29, Iss 1, p 35 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Resilience Alliance, 2024.

Abstract

Fire has cultural and economic significance for Indigenous and rural peoples worldwide, being used to manage landscapes for activities such as hunting, gathering, cropping, and forestry, and for ceremonial and spiritual purposes. Policy interventions by state and non-state organizations, such as regulations, economic incentives, and communication campaigns, can target fire use directly, or affect it indirectly, for example, by restricting land access. Yet evidence of such impacts has not been synthesized at the global scale. We analyzed 512 examples in 68 countries to describe the range of policy interventions by state and non-state organizations that target and/or affect fire use, categorizing interventions based on the broad actor types involved, their mode of operation (e.g., regulation) and their intentionality and/or possible effects vis-a-vis fire use. Of these interventions, 74% involved only state agencies in policy design and implementations, 4% involved only non-state organizations, and 18% involved collaboration between state and/or non-state organizations and/or communities. Three hundred and nine interventions directly targeted fire use, of which 87% aimed to eliminate or constrain fire use. Two hundred and three affected fire use indirectly, of which 88% led to reductions in or constraints upon fire use. Though there is some recognition in the 21st century of a need, in certain contexts, to support local fire use, for reasons related to environmental justice, ecology, wildfire risk and climate change, the literature we reviewed points to several challenges for contemporary efforts toward this end. These include contradictions between policy interventions, mistrust between actors following histories of fire suppression, greater fuel loads increasing the risk of burning where fire has been suppressed, and the need to consider the indirect effects of other types of policy, such as those related to land tenure.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17083087 and 48502901
Volume :
29
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Ecology and Society
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.7edbf83e17184c2381d5cadf573d9a40
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-14850-290135