Abstract
Abstract
Background
This paper traces the changing dynamics of forest management on
privately owned land in southern Ontario, Canada, using the conceptual
lens of state legibility to highlight how incentive programs are
creating new ways of seeing and engaging in stewardship. Specifically,
the Managed Forest Tax Incentive Program (MFTIP) and its corresponding
Managed Forest Plan are investigated as a means through which a
diversified field of knowledge has been activated to enable
climate-conscious adaptive stewardship across the region.
Methods
This case study uses a qualitative approach, incorporating document
analysis, semi-structured interviews, and direct observation. Similar
patterns and relationships within and across sites are identified to
build theory and shed light on the socio-ecological context of private
forest management.
Results
Set within southern Ontario’s history of forest management and the
rise of neoliberal environmental governance, this paper contributes
theoretically to scholarship on state legibility. The results illustrate
a shift in stewardship on private lands through a rescaling of
management responsibility that embraces different perspectives and
builds place-based practical knowledge of forest systems. By mapping and
building knowledge networks, diverse approaches to management have
proliferated at the local and regional levels. These approaches have
been influenced by previous management experience, different
professional backgrounds, knowledge of participants, and the motivation
of landowners to engage in active stewardship.
Conclusion
The process of developing a management plan plays a key role in
making landscapes legible to all stakeholders. The document also serves
as an instrument of the state to build private landowners’ and forest
consultants’ knowledge and capacity. This has set in motion a
socio-ecological landscape strategy to address encroachment, invasive
species, and climatic challenges in this increasingly urbanizing
region.
Publisher
International Society of Arboriculture
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