Skip to content
General Program
Panel information
In-Person Participant info
Online Participant info
IN-CONFERENCE EXCURSION REGISTRATION
Support IASC
  • About the Conference
    • Welcome & Introduction
    • Conference Theme & Sub-themes
    • Accepted Panels
    • Information for Online Participants
    • Pre-conference workshops
    • Organizers
    • Sponsors
    • Hosting institutions
    • Elinor Ostrom Award
    • Contact us
  • Information for Online Participants
  • Visas
    • Visa Information
    • IASC membership
  • Schedules & guidelines
    • General Program
    • Accepted Panels grouped in 12 sub-themes
    • Author Index
    • Important Dates
    • Conference Venue
  • Excursions
    • In-Conference Excursions — Thursday June 19th, 2025
    • Post-Conference Excursions — June 21 – 22, 2025
  • Fees, Travel, Food & Lodging
    • Conference Registration Fees
    • Travel
    • Food at the Conference
    • Participant Lodging
  • About the Conference
    • Welcome & Introduction
    • Conference Theme & Sub-themes
    • Accepted Panels
    • Information for Online Participants
    • Pre-conference workshops
    • Organizers
    • Sponsors
    • Hosting institutions
    • Elinor Ostrom Award
    • Contact us
  • Information for Online Participants
  • Visas
    • Visa Information
    • IASC membership
  • Schedules & guidelines
    • General Program
    • Accepted Panels grouped in 12 sub-themes
    • Author Index
    • Important Dates
    • Conference Venue
  • Excursions
    • In-Conference Excursions — Thursday June 19th, 2025
    • Post-Conference Excursions — June 21 – 22, 2025
  • Fees, Travel, Food & Lodging
    • Conference Registration Fees
    • Travel
    • Food at the Conference
    • Participant Lodging

Sapkota, Lok Mani

Panel Chair/Moderator

Panel 1.18. Community-based forestry: traditions and challenges
Chair: Lok Mani Sapkota

Author

Session 1. 18.
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Hasbrouck Hall HAS0134
Emergence and Decline of Forest Commons: the Role of Social, Economic, and Political Factors in Sustaining Interest
in-person
Lok Mani Sapkota1, Reem Hajjar1, and Tol Sokchea2
1Oregon State University, United States, 2The Regional Community Forestry Training Center for Asia and the Pacific (RECOFTC), Cambodia

In recent decades, formal community-based forest management has gained significant attention, particularly in developing countries, where a large proportion of forest areas have been transferred to local communities. However, substantial changes in people-forest relationships have been reported following this formalization, driven by both internal and external shifts in the social-ecological systems in which forests and forest-dependent communities are embedded.

Our study explores how community forestry has influenced people-forest relationships within the evolving context of the Prey Lang Extended Landscape in Cambodia, which has undergone profound changes over the last five decades. Between March and August 2024, we conducted interviews with community forestry stakeholders, including representatives from the government, civil society, and local community members—such as community forest leaders, elders, forest-dependent individuals, the poor, and youth—across 20 sites in the landscape.
Our findings reveal that over the last five decades, changing social, economic, and political conditions have significantly impacted local communities' engagement with forest commons. Prior to the 1990s, no formal community-based institutions existed in the landscape to manage forests. However, the political, economic, and social changes increased pressure on forests and land—key resources for local livelihoods—sparking a surge of interest in community forestry during the 1990s and early 2000s. This led to high participation in the establishment of community forests, many of which were formalized starting in 2007 with the introduction of appropriate legal frameworks. Despite community forestry generally meeting expectations for forest protection, interest in collective action has waned in recent years. As economic opportunities have expanded and the nature of pressures on forests and land has shifted, the opportunity cost of participation for community members has increased. In many cases, forest protection responsibilities now rest with only a few committed individuals.

Our observations suggest that in rapidly changing contexts, especially in developing countries and post-conflict regions, the goals of community forestry must align with the evolving social, economic, and political landscape for its sustenance. A robust program design alone is insufficient; periodic reviews and adjustments are essential to ensure the program remains responsive to existing and emerging challenges, leverages new opportunities, and delivers equitable benefits to all community members.

  • General Program
  • Panel Schedule Oral Presentations
  • Poster Presentations
  • IASC 2025 Social System Map
  • IASC 2025 Slack Workspace
  • Teamup Calendar (also see below in your local time)
  • General Program
  • Panel Schedule Oral Presentations
  • Poster Presentations
  • IASC 2025 Social System Map
  • IASC 2025 Slack Workspace
  • Teamup Calendar (also see below in your local time)

About the Conference

Welcome & Introduction

Conference theme & sub-themes

Online Components

Pre-conference workshops

Organizers

Sponsors

Hosting Institutions

Elinor Ostrom Award

Contact Us

Visas, registration & payments

Visa Information

IASC Membership

Registration

Schedules & Guidlines

Important Dates

Call for Contributions

Panels in Progress

Conference Venue

Conference Excursions

In-Conference Excursions

Post-Conference Excursions

Fees, Travel, Food & Lodging

Conference Registration Fees

Travel

Food at the Conference

Participant Lodging

Facebook-f X-twitter Linkedin

© 2025 | Privacy & Cookies Policy

Made with 🤟🏻 by Pfister Lab