On May 20, 2016 from 10:00 Tola Gemechu Ango will defend his PhD thesis titled: Ecosystem
Services and Disservices in an Agriculture–Forest Mosaic: A Study of
Forest and Tree Management and Landscape Transformation in Southwestern
Ethiopia
Opponent Tobias Plieninger, Associate Professor
Supervisor Lowe Börjeson, Associate Professor
Venue: De Geersalen, Geovetenskapens hus, Svante Arrhenius väg 14, Frescati, Stockholm
Abstact
The intertwined challenges of food insecurity, deforestation, and
biodiversity loss remain perennial challenges in Ethiopia, despite
increasing policy interventions. This thesis investigates smallholding
farmers’ tree- and forest-based livelihoods and management practices, in
the context of national development and conservation policies, and
examines how these local management practices and policies transform the
agriculture–forest mosaic landscapes of southwestern Ethiopia.
The thesis is guided by a political ecology perspective, and focuses
on an analytical framework of ecosystem services (ESs) and disservices
(EDs). It uses a mixed research design with data from participatory
field mapping, a tree ‘inventory’, interviews, focus group discussions,
population censuses, and analysis of satellite images and aerial photos.
The thesis presents four papers. Paper I investigates how
smallholding farmers in an agriculture–forest mosaic landscape manage
trees and forests in relation to a few selected ESs and EDs that they
consider particularly beneficial or problematic. The farmers’ management
practices were geared towards mitigating tree- and forest-related EDs
such as wild mammal crop raiders, while at the same time augmenting ESs
such as shaded coffee production, resulting in a restructuring of the
agriculture–forest mosaic. Paper II builds further on the EDs introduced
in paper I, to assess the effects of crop raids by forest-dwelling wild
mammals on farmers’ livelihoods. The EDs of wild mammals and
human–wildlife conflict are shown to constitute a problem that goes well
beyond a narrow focus on yield loss. The paper illustrates the broader
impacts of crop-raiding wild mammals on local agricultural and
livelihood development (e.g. the effects on food security and children’s
schooling), and how state forest and wildlife control and related
conservation policy undermined farmers’ coping strategies. Paper III
examines local forest-based livelihood sources and how smallholders’
access to forests is reduced by state transfer of forestland to private
companies for coffee investment. This paper highlights how relatively
small land areas appropriated for investment in relatively densely
inhabited areas can harm the livelihoods of many farmers, and also
negatively affect forest conservation. Paper IV investigates the
patterns and drivers of forest cover change from 1958 to 2010. Between
1973 and 2010, 25% of the total forest was lost, and forest cover
changes varied both spatially and temporally. State development and
conservation policies spanning various political economies (feudal,
socialist, and ‘free market-oriented’) directly or indirectly affected
local ecosystem use, ecosystem management practices, and migration
processes. These factors (policies, local practices, and migration) have
thus together shaped the spatial patterns of forest cover change in the
last 50 years.
The thesis concludes that national development and conservation
policies and the associated power relations and inequality have often
undermined local livelihood security and forest conservation efforts. It
also highlights how a conceptualization of a local ecosystem as a
provider of both ESs and EDs can generate an understanding of local
practices and decisions that shape development and conservation
trajectories in mosaic landscapes. The thesis draws attention to the
need to make development and conservation policies relevant and
adaptable to local conditions as a means to promote local livelihood and
food security, forest and biodiversity conservation, and ESs generated
by agricultural mosaic landscapes.
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