Plantation forest leases: experiences of New Zealand Māori

Author:

Rotarangi Stephanie1

Affiliation:

1. CSAFE – Centre for Sustainability: Agriculture, Food, Energy, Environment, University of Otago, P.O. Box 56, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand.

Abstract

Numerous scholars agree that to integrate stakeholder demands into forest management is the central challenge facing forestry science. A necessary step is to translate public views and expectations into forest management techniques. This study uses document analysis and in-depth interviews to understand the values and expectations of New Zealand’s indigenous people (Māori) who have exotic species forests planted on their ancestral land. The two case studies involve long-term forest lease arrangements where Māori families are the collective owners of the land but the forest is managed by third parties. The results suggest that the landowners’ overall view of forestry is more critically influenced by political frameworks than by forest management techniques. The structures of governance and tenure and the legislation affecting the land are viewed as complicated and constraining. However, after decades of experience, Māori have successfully incorporated plantation forests into their sense of people and place. Despite difficulties and disappointments, the land use of forestry and forest regimes are, overall, viewed favourably by the landowners, consistent with environmental considerations and their culture and values.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Ecology,Forestry,Global and Planetary Change

Reference25 articles.

1. Barnard, T., Spence, H., and Crawford, K. 2005. Forest values in New Zealand: engaging in the Montreal Process Review. New Zealand Forest Research Institution, Rotorua, New Zealand.

2. Brown, C., Durst, P.B., and Enters, T. 2005. Perceptions of excellence: ingredients of good forest management. In In search of excellence: exemplary forest management in Asia and the Pacific. Edited by P.B. Durst, C. Brown, H.D. Tacio, and M. Ishikawa. Asia-Pacific Forestry Commission, Bangkok, Thailand. pp. 404–409.

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4. Effects of surrounding landscape composition on the conservation value of native and exotic habitats for native forest birds

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