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Abstract

While gender issues are becoming increasingly integrated in international environment and development policies, the simplistic manner in which they are treated holds scant promise for real change. In the Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) program in Burkina Faso, women are targeted in projects promoting non-timber forest product commercialisation aimed to incentivise forest conservation. Such policies are often based on essentialist assumptions about what men and women do, ignoring that social relations of inequality need to be understood in context. Drawing on intersectional theory this study analyses REDD+ documents, and data about resource use in two villages in Burkina Faso, showing how the participatory approach in Burkina's REDD+ program is unlikely to encourage currently marginalised voices to be heard in existing forest management organisations. Rather, the lack of acknowledgement of intersecting relations of inequality leads to crucial aspects of NTFP resource use being overlooked, and risks leading to increased marginalisation of certain groups.

Keywords

gender; climate policy; environmental governance; intersectionality; NTFP

Published in

International Forestry Review
2016, volume: 18, number: 4, pages: 511-521

SLU Authors

Global goals (SDG)

SDG5 Gender equality
SDG10 Reduced inequalities
SDG13 Climate action
SDG15 Life on land

UKÄ Subject classification

Gender Studies
Human Geography
Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1505/146554816820127578

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/78461