NGOs
PELUM
Association
Allowing diverse
institutions to exchange lessons they
have learned is one of the strengths of
the PELUM network. Some of its diverse
institutional members ranging from
the Tanzania Organisation of Permaculture
Promoters in Dar es Salaam to Integrated
Rural Development Initiatives in Kampala,
Uganda are sure to be featured in
future issues of the People and Plants
Handbook. /GJM
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PELUM, Participatory
Ecological Land Use Management,
was launched in 1995. It is a
regional membership organization
covering east and southern
Africa. The main thrust of its
work is strengthening the
training skills of its members.
It began its work by developing
curricula on participatory land
use management. This has led,
among other outputs, to the
development of an agroecology and
community development syllabus to
be used in 2-year courses in
Zimbabwe, a pilot program for the
region. |
The Association has
conducted courses on curriculum design,
project monitoring, permaculture,
holistic resource management and
participatory rural appraisal in
Botswana, Kenya, Lesotho, Tanzania,
Uganda, South Africa, and Zimbabwe. The
Association distributes training
materials (including books and posters
produced in east and southern Africa)
more widely in the region. In the future,
the Association plans to produce a
magazine on participatory ecological land
use management in the region, and become
active in advocacy and lobbying.
PELUM activities are
depicted on the petals of a flower,
as if to signify the link with
farmers and the desire to grow,
develop and mature into seed and food
of tomorrow. The activities include:
syllabi development, training in
materials development, information
sifting and exchange, searching out
new innovations, accreditation,
advocacy, skills bank
development.
Mukute,
M. 1997. A flower of our future
PELUM Association is launched.
Forest, Trees and People 32/33:14-17.
CONTACT
John Wilson, Coordinator, PELUM
Association,
Box MP 1059, Mount Pleasant, Harare,
Zimbabwe;
Tel. +263.4.744470, Fax
+263.4.726911,
E-mail pelum@mail.pci.co.zw
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The
Future of Tropical Rainforest Peoples
In Papua New Guinea, the
main topics for APFT include the impact
of logging, local perception of the
environment, the city-forest interface,
and land and resource use in general.
Ethnobotany is one of the major
methodological approaches taken. European
and national researchers work together at
two main field locations, one a
low-altitude area subject to logging,
another a mid-altitude wildlife
management and conservation area. APFT is
firmly embedded the National Research
Institutes focus on the
conservation of renewable resources. /
CKS
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The Future of Tropical
Rainforest Peoples project
(Avenir des Peuples des Forêts
Tropicales, or APFT) is a
consortium of five European
institutions. It was established
in 1996 to investigate the
interaction between human ecology
and the environment. A primary
objective of the project is to
develop understanding of the
human ecology of rainforest
peoples and their indigenous
knowledge by improving research
and development capacities. The
project seeks to improve the
viability of development and
conservation projects; develop
and coordinate expertise in
Europe and ACP (African,
Caribbean and Pacific) countries;
and stimulate reflection and
awareness by decision makers.
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The five member
institutions give a balance between
natural and social science efforts in
forest conservation. The major
disciplines involved are anthropology,
archaeology, demography, ecology,
economics and paleo-environmental
studies. Some of the questions addressed
include: Are the activities of these
populations compatible with the
maintenance of biodiversity or are they
ecologically destructive? Can traditional
knowledge and techniques contribute to
the elaboration of new and more efficient
forest management models? What types of
strategies do these populations develop
when their sociological and economic
structures are weakened or when their
environment is endangered? What kind of
participatory management can be
effective?
Research activities are being
undertaken in Central Africa, Papua New
Guinea and the three Guyanas. Belize,
West Africa and other Pacific area
countries will subsequently be included.
Local researchers participate in all the
projects, as collaboration between ACP
and European researchers is fundamental
to the APFT structure and its long-term
viability. The APFT consortium is
financed by the European Union, and has
support for five years. In addition to
the consortium, more than 15 other
European and ACP institutions are
interacting in the network. The long-term
goal is for all these organizations to
work together to produce realistic and
pragmatic recommendations and actions.
The ecology of insular
Southeast Asia has been dominated by
rainforest for over 10,000 years,
though it has changed much
historically and is very varied
geographically. One of the most
immediately striking aspects of its
variability is the significant
decrease in Dipterocarp species as we
move east and their replacement by
dominants more typical of the
Australo-Melanesian area
There
are, however, many ecological
similarities between Moluccan forests
and those further west in island
Southeast Asia. Not the least of
these has been the role played by
human populations. Forests have long
been a focus of human subsistence
extraction, and human agency has had
decisive consequences for their
ecology, for example, through the
introduction and hunting of deer, the
practice of small-scale swidden
cultivation, the extraction of palm
sago and selective logging and
collection for exchange.
Ellen, R.F. 1997.
The human consequences of
deforestation in the Moluccas. Civilisations
44:176-193.
CONTAC T
- Pierre de
Maret, Coordinator for Africa,
Centre dAnthropologie
Culturelle, Université Libre de
Bruxelles, CP 124, 44 Avenue
Jeanne, 1050, Bruxelles, Belgium;
Tel. +32.2.6504338, Fax
+32.2.6504337, E-mail apft@resulb.ulb.ac.be
- Willy
Delvingt, Département des Eaux
et Forets, Faculté des Sciences
Agronomiques, 2 Passage des
Déportés, 5030 Gembloux,
Belgium; Tel. +32.81622321, Fax
+32.81622301, E-mail sylviculture@fsagx.ac.be
- Serge
Bahuchet, Laboratoire de Langues
et Civilisations à Tradition
Orale (LACITO), CNRS, 44 rue de
lAmiral Mouchez, 75014,
Paris, France; Tel.
+33.1.45809673, Fax
+33.1.45805983, E-mail bahuchet@lacito.msh-paris.fr
- Pierre
Grenand, Coordinator for Guyana,
ORSTOM, Les Grands Moulins, 89460
Cravant, France; Tel./Fax
+33.3.86425351, E-mail grenand@msh-paris.fr
- Roy Ellen,
Coordinator for Papua New Guinea,
Department of Anthropology and
Sociology, Eliot College, The
University of Kent at Canterbury,
Kent CT2 7NS, UK; Tel.
+44.1227.764000, Fax
+44.1227.827289, E-mail r.f.ellen@ukc.ac.uk
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Organization
for Tropical Studies
Although the original
focus of OTS was squarely on
pure tropical ecology, it has
offered training opportunities in
agroecology and has supported research on
local ecological knowledge. In the past,
John Vandemeer, Miguel Altieri and Jan
Salick well known for their
research on tropical agriculture systems
have led a training course in
agroecology. /GJM
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The Organization for Tropical
Studies (OTS) was created in 1963
to provide leadership in
education, research and the wise
use of natural resources in the
tropics. It is a consortium of 55
universities and research
institutions from the United
States and Costa Rica. |
OTS offers up to ten
field courses per year in tropical
biology and ecology, including Tropical
Biology; Management of Natural Resources;
Agroecology; Tropical Conservation
Biology; and Tropical Plant Systematics.
Though most of the field courses are held
in Costa Rica (in English and Spanish),
an annual course on Amazonian forest
ecology (in Portuguese) has been run for
the past 4 years in Manaus, Brazil. A
wide range of short courses and workshops
on environmental policy for US and Latin
American legislators, administrators and
government officials in several Latin
American countries complement this
program of intensive field courses.
OTS facilitates research at its three
field stations in Costa Rica. La Selva
Biological Station, in the northeast of
the country, is in largely old growth
tropical rainforest. Las Cruces
Biological Station, which includes the
Robert and Catherine Wilson Botanical
Garden, is in mid-elevation cloud forest
on the Pacific slope, while the Palo
Verde Field Station is surrounded by
semi-deciduous dry forest in northwestern
Costa Rica. Research activities focus on
assessing biological resources and local
knowledge.
La Selva and Barro
Colorado Island (BCI) are perhaps the
best-known forests in the New World
tropics. Comparative studies can tell
us which ecological processes are
common to both sites and which are
specific to a site. BCI is
considerab1y drier than La Selva,
receiving 2.5 meters of rain per year
in comparison to La Selvas 4
meters of rain. BCI has a distinct
dry season from January through
April, whereas La Selvas
rainfall is more aseasonal. The
climate and, to some extent, the
floristics of the sites differ but
many other features, such as the
forest structure and animal
communities, are similar. Thus we
might expect some ecological
processes to be the same at both
sites and others to differ.
Young,
B. and C. Echeverría. 1995. Noticias
de La Selva. OTS Liana, The
Organization for Tropical Studies
Newsletter, Summer/Fall: 4.
CONTACT
Gary S.
Hartshorn, Executive Director,
Organization for Tropical Studies,
Box 90630, Durham, NC 27708-0630,
USA;
Tel. +1.919.6845774, Fax
+1.919.6845661,
E-mail ghartsho@acpub.duke.edu
Website http://www.ots.duke.edu/ or http://cro.ots.ac.cr/
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