Replication Data for: Agroforestry governance for operationalising the landscape approach: connecting conservation and farming actors

The expansion and intensifcation of agriculture as well as the associated land clearing are threatening both biodiversity and human wellbeing in tropical areas. Implementing agroforestry systems through a landscape approach has a strong potential for integrating nature conservation objectives into agricultural systems. A key challenge for implementing the landscape approach is that political processes and conservation initiatives operate in ‘silos’, being largely disconnected from farmers and local key agents responsible for tree governance. In this study we brought together diferent stakeholders in facilitated, structured focus discussions to analyse the role of actor groups in tree governance. We used social network analysis to quantitatively and qualitatively analyse agroforestry governance networks and actor interactions related to information exchange, fnance fows, and regulation. The analyses were conducted at national, sub-national and local levels in four countries: Honduras, Peru, Indonesia, and Uganda. Using trees on farms as a boundary object enabled all participants to bridge common interests and illuminate some of the constraints and opportunities of local governance systems while overcoming institutional and ideological barriers. The quantitative results of the social network analysis identify a strong density of actor linkages. Despite this density, results indicate incoherent and fragmented actor networks undermining the support for agroforestry on all levels. Nevertheless, existing processes related to fnance, information, and regulation can be better aligned to ensure an efective implementation and mainstreaming of agroforestry for biodiversity conservation. Building social capital among key actors on both national and local levels can reveal a strong potential for adaptive learning processes mainstreaming agroforestry as essential component of “good farming” and integrating incentive systems for a coherent and efective agroforestry governance. We conclude that redirecting both public and private funding towards continuous seed-funding for the facilitation of these integrated learning processes can transform landscape management and at the same time reduce transaction costs.

Dataset’s Files

Netmap_categorysummary.xls
MD5: 73c94f8e9b7e385f946dcae333f5500c

Combined category summary


Netmap_graphproperties.xls
MD5: 24fac629b04bd87e8df8416cf9f6ec0c

Combined graph properties


Netmap_nodeproperties.xls
MD5: 9a4de3d286d705378fa768466ec02f8d

Combine node properties


Netmap_tiesdata.xls
MD5: 573eac678b3a1df75ceb059032ee9e16

Combined ties data


Terms of use
This dataset is made available under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC-BY-4.0). The license allows you, the user, to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and/or transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially.
Creative Commons License.
Authors

Zinngrebe, Yves; Borasino, Elena; Chiputwa, Brian; Dobie, Philip; Garcia, Edwin; Gassner, Anja; Komarudin, Heru; Liswanti, Nining; Makui, Parmutia; Plieninger, Tobias; Winter, Ettie; Hauck, Jennifer

Keywords

social capital, adaptive capacity, biodiversity, aichi target 7, social network analysis, net-map, surveys

Publisher

Work Package III: Sectorial resource mobilization

Publication date

05 Aug 2021

DOI

https://doi.org/10.34725/DVN/NGGXCZ