TY - BOOK ID - 145113542 TI - Forest Management, Conflict and Social-Ecological Systems in a Changing World AU - Sansilvestri, Roxane AU - Fernández-Manjarrés, Juan F. PY - 2022 PB - Basel MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute DB - UniCat KW - Research. KW - Forestry. KW - forest planning and management KW - rural community sustainability KW - ecosystem services KW - forest sociology KW - forestry in the media KW - forest vulnerability KW - adaptive capacity KW - multiple-use land management KW - conflicting perspectives KW - natural processes KW - high-yield silviculture KW - forest management KW - multifunctionality KW - carbon offset KW - collective action KW - conflict avoidance KW - mitigation KW - payment for ecosystem services KW - social-ecological KW - France KW - protected areas establishment KW - stakeholder participation KW - landscape protection KW - qualitative research KW - Soutok Protected Landscape Area (Czech Republic) KW - REDD+ KW - conflict KW - forests KW - land tenure KW - political ecology KW - ecological unit KW - synergy/trade-off KW - spatial structure KW - attribute characteristics KW - forest sustainability KW - production forests KW - environment forests KW - carbon credit KW - retention approach KW - common-pool resource management KW - local vs. global KW - economic oligopoly KW - panacea paradigm KW - renewable energy KW - sectoral organization KW - CHANS KW - globalization KW - historical data KW - socio-ecological frameworks KW - dry-edge KW - forest planning and management KW - rural community sustainability KW - ecosystem services KW - forest sociology KW - forestry in the media KW - forest vulnerability KW - adaptive capacity KW - multiple-use land management KW - conflicting perspectives KW - natural processes KW - high-yield silviculture KW - forest management KW - multifunctionality KW - carbon offset KW - collective action KW - conflict avoidance KW - mitigation KW - payment for ecosystem services KW - social-ecological KW - France KW - protected areas establishment KW - stakeholder participation KW - landscape protection KW - qualitative research KW - Soutok Protected Landscape Area (Czech Republic) KW - REDD+ KW - conflict KW - forests KW - land tenure KW - political ecology KW - ecological unit KW - synergy/trade-off KW - spatial structure KW - attribute characteristics KW - forest sustainability KW - production forests KW - environment forests KW - carbon credit KW - retention approach KW - common-pool resource management KW - local vs. global KW - economic oligopoly KW - panacea paradigm KW - renewable energy KW - sectoral organization KW - CHANS KW - globalization KW - historical data KW - socio-ecological frameworks KW - dry-edge UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:145113542 AB - Conflicts in forest management are unavoidable because of the large temporal and spatial scales characteristic of forests ecosystems and the large number of actors involved. Forests are multifunctional ecosystems par excellence, and it can be hypothesized that current public policies, and especially those labeled as societal transitions, can affect this widespread holistic management goal. In this Special Issue, the different contributions by the authors raise the questions of how different types of conflicts arise and what alternatives exist to solve those conflicts. The Issue contains examples from both temperate and tropical forests and addresses, for instance, conflicts arising from REDD+ programs, the declaration of new protected areas, the complexity of negotiating carbon offset targets, the loss of local knowledge because of demographic trends, and meeting biodiversity and biomass targets simultaneously, among others. We present a general typology of sources of conflicts because of two dimensions: a vertical dimension represented by bottom-up versus top-down approaches and a horizontal dimension arising by ecosystem extent and ownership boundaries. Awareness that new policies can be a source of unexpected conflicts calls for precaution while testing new ‘transition’ approaches. ER -