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Two decades of community forestry in Nepal: What have we learned?

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<strong>Two</strong> <strong>decades</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>community</strong> <strong>forestry</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Nepal</strong>: <strong>What</strong> <strong>have</strong> <strong>we</strong> <strong>learned</strong>?<br />

“Social mobilisation, <strong>in</strong>stitutional developments and human resource development <strong>in</strong> the<br />

district <strong>have</strong> been possible only through NSCFP……Local NGOs are now <strong>we</strong>ll capacitated<br />

and can even compete at the national level.”<br />

Hitraj Karki, Gram<strong>in</strong> Bikas Manch (FORD) <strong>Nepal</strong>, Okhaldhunga<br />

“NGO capacities <strong>have</strong> been built through NSCFP <strong>in</strong>tervention. Now many tra<strong>in</strong>ed people<br />

<strong>have</strong> been engaged not only <strong>in</strong> <strong>forestry</strong>; they are competent human resources available<br />

locally <strong>of</strong> health, dr<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g water and education sector too…. NSCFP was the one who<br />

started <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g NGOs as new service provider actor, and now this approach is be<strong>in</strong>g<br />

extended <strong>in</strong> other districts”<br />

Ramesh Sunam, ForestAction<br />

“Most <strong>of</strong> the NGOs operat<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the district now and work<strong>in</strong>g for various donors and<br />

development agencies are those which <strong>we</strong>re tra<strong>in</strong>ed by NSCFP and <strong>have</strong> worked with<br />

NSCFP before”.<br />

N.R. Neupane, NGO activist, Dolakha<br />

At the same time, the growth <strong>of</strong> NGOs <strong>in</strong> the project area provided an opportunity<br />

for some young people to ga<strong>in</strong> local employment, although not to the extent that it<br />

had a signifi cant effect on out-migration trends <strong>in</strong> the districts.<br />

“Another aspect…is the reversal <strong>of</strong> the bra<strong>in</strong> dra<strong>in</strong> which had taken place <strong>in</strong>…rural areas. In<br />

general, the young educated people orig<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g from the rural areas had diffi culties to fi nd<br />

their place back home. The <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>of</strong> local NGOs as service providers for emerg<strong>in</strong>g<br />

Forest User Groups provided an opportunity to engage them <strong>in</strong> the “micro-projects”. ..”<br />

Karl Schuler, NSCFP Team Leader (for SDC) Sept 1995 – April 1999; Assistant (later<br />

Deputy) Country Director <strong>of</strong> SDC <strong>in</strong> <strong>Nepal</strong> to Feb 2004<br />

“I appreciate the multi-partnership approach <strong>of</strong> the project. Although this was challeng<strong>in</strong>g at<br />

the beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g, it helped create local employment and many human resources”<br />

Ganesh Karki, FECOFUN<br />

The dynamics <strong>of</strong> NGO development <strong>we</strong>re not simple, ho<strong>we</strong>ver. Some <strong>of</strong> the most<br />

energetic pr<strong>of</strong>essional forest rangers left the department to establish their own<br />

NGOs, specialis<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the provision <strong>of</strong> technical services. Some would consider<br />

this an unfortunate loss <strong>of</strong> departmental expertise; others <strong>of</strong> healthy competition.<br />

At the political level, many <strong>of</strong> the NGOs through which the project worked –<br />

especially <strong>in</strong> Dolakha district – <strong>we</strong>re overtly (or perceived to be) l<strong>in</strong>ked to one<br />

particular party, giv<strong>in</strong>g rise to compla<strong>in</strong>ts by Maoists that the project had to revisit<br />

the way it was operat<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> terms <strong>of</strong> work<strong>in</strong>g with local NGOs. Competition for work<br />

bet<strong>we</strong>en NGOs sometimes became fi erce, and project staff members <strong>we</strong>re under<br />

constant pressure to demonstrate absolute political neutrality, accountability and<br />

transparency <strong>in</strong> the face <strong>of</strong> spurious accusations (see section on confl ict sensitive<br />

management).<br />

It has already been noted that <strong>in</strong> the fi nal, post-confl ict years <strong>of</strong> NSCFP, particular<br />

emphasis was placed on build<strong>in</strong>g the capacities <strong>of</strong> CFUGs, and that NGOs <strong>have</strong><br />

17

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