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Full Description
Forest certification has been widely accepted as a tool that would encourage industrial and non-industrial management of resources in an environmentally acceptable, socially beneficial and economically viable manner. Much has been written on certification yet five issues have been missing, which this book addresses: an analysis of the scientific basis for the certification standards; a formal and mechanistic incorporation of social and natural system sustainability as part of the standards; the rationale for the different sets of standards that are currently being used to certify governmental, industrial and non-industrial organizations; the success of the different sets of standards in assessing the environmental acceptability, social benefits and economic viability of the managed system; and, the difficulty of certifying small landowners with current protocols.
Forest Certification examines the historical roots of forest certification, the factors that guide the development of certification protocols, the players involved in certification, the factors determining the customers to be certified, and the benefits of certification. The book also covers the terminology and other issues intrinsic to certification that direct the structure of standards, the similarities between indicators of different human disturbances within the ecosystem/landscape and certification standards, and, finally, a case study evaluating the strengths and weaknesses of existing certification protocols.
Forest Certification is unique in its analysis of the scientific basis for the structure of the forest certification protocols. It documents the roles of human values in the development of assessment protocols but demonstrates how elements of existing protocols should be used to produce non-value based standards.
Contents
Preface 1 Issues in forest certification 1.1 Improvements crucial to successful implementation of forest certification 1.2 Why certification is relevant 2 Roots of forest certification: its developmental history, types of approaches, and statistics 2.1 Origins of the concept of forest certification 2.2 Other relevant initiatives in forest certification 2.3 The certification of environmental claims in industrialized countries 2.4 Analysis of forest certification approaches 2.5 Current statistics and characterization of certified forests by ownership type and land area 3 Definitions and current values integrated into certification protocols 3.1 Defining terminology 3.2 Value-laden issues of certification 4 Case study and evaluation of the dominant certification protocols 4.1 Relevance of Toumey Forest to assess certification protocols 4.2 Analysis of the elements comprising the dominant certification protocols as structured in January 1998 4.3 Case study: student evaluation of protocols at Yale's Toumey Forest 5 Indicators relevant for inclusion in assessments: types, minimum number, and those derived from non-human values 5.1 Indicators selection criteria 5.2 Non-value-based parameters relevant for incorporation into certification 5.3 Social legacies constraining natural resource uses 6 Direct and indirect impacts of natural resource management practices on the ecosystem 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Forest management activities leading to regeneration 6.2.1 Processing of logs for transport (from stump to landing) 6.2.2 Methods of log transport (from stump to landing) 6.3 Forest management activities not associated with regeneration 6.4 Infrastructure related to forest management activities 6.5 Summary 7 Synthesis discussion of issues relevant to certification 7.1 Necessity of assessing the landscape's matrix within which a management unit is embedded 7.2 Social and natural science links 7.3 Public participation in certification 7.4 Importance and participation of non-industrial private forests 7.5 Certification: constraints and opportunities for non-industrial private forestland owners 7.6 Estimating price premiums necessary to pay for forest certification 7.7 Chain of custody as an impediment to certification 7.8 Challenges and opportunities for tropical timber certification: Mexico's experience 8 Challenges and benefits of certification 8.1 Summary discussion of the advantages and challenges of certification 8.2 Opportunities and challenges identified by certifiers and certified owners 8.3 Factors affecting future use of certification as an assessment tool 8.4 Reason for forestland owners not to become certified 8.5 The past and future goals of certification.