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Edited by Arild Angelsen, Maria Brockhaus,
William D. Sunderlin and Louis V. Verchot

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About the book

This is the third book in a series of highly recognised REDD+ volumes from CIFOR. It provides an analysis of actual REDD+ design and early implementation, based on a large research project – the Global Comparative Study on REDD+ (GCS), undertaken by CIFOR and partners. It takes stock of national, subnational and local REDD+ experiences, and identifies the political and practical challenges to designing and implementing effective, efficient and equitable REDD+ policies and projects. Key conclusions are:

As an idea, REDD+ is a success story: It is a fresh approach generating hope of significant result-based funding to address an urgent need for climate change mitigation. The idea has been sufficiently broad to serve as a canopy, under which a wide range of actors can grow their own trees.

REDD+ faces huge challenges: Powerful political and economic interests favour continued deforestation and degradation. Implementation must be coordinated across various government levels and agencies; benefits must be distributed and need to balance effectiveness and equity; tenure insecurity and safeguards must be genuinely addressed; and transparent institutions, reliable carbon monitoring and realistic reference levels are all required to support result-based systems.

REDD+ requires – and can catalyse – transformational change: New economic incentives, new information and discourses, new actors and new policy coalitions have the potential to move domestic policies away from the business as usual trajectory.

REDD+ projects are hybrids in high deforestation areas: Project proponents are pursuing strategies that mix the enforcement of regulations and support to alternative livelihoods (ICDP) with result-based incentives (PES). Projects tend to be located in high deforestation and high forest carbon areas, yielding high additionality if they succeed.

'No regret' policy options exist: Despite uncertainty about the future of REDD+, stakeholders need to build political support and coalitions for change, invest in adequate information systems, and implement policies that can reduce deforestation and forest degradation, but are desirable regardless of climate objectives.

About the editors

  • Arild Angelsen is professor of economics at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences (UMB) and a senior associate at CIFOR

  • William D. Sunderlin is a sociologist and principal scientist at CIFOR, and heads the GCS research component on projects

  • Maria Brockhaus is an economist, policy analyst and scientist at CIFOR, and heads the GCS research component on policy analysis

  • Louis Verchot is an ecologist and principal scientist at CIFOR, and works in the GCS research component on MRV and reference levels

Contents

Foreword (PDF, 215KB)
Summary (PDF, 89KB)
1 Introduction
Arild Angelsen, Maria Brockhaus, William D. Sunderlin and Louis V. Verchot
Part 1. Understanding REDD+
2 Seeing REDD+ through 4Is: A political economy framework
Maria Brockhaus and Arild Angelsen
3 The evolution of REDD+
Arild Angelsen and Desmond McNeill
4 REDD+ and the global economy: Competing forces and policy options
Pablo Pacheco, Louis Putzel, Krystof Obidzinski and George Schoneveld
Part 2. Implementing REDD+
5 Politics and power in national REDD+ policy processes
Monica Di Gregorio, Maria Brockhaus, Tim Cronin and and Efrian Muharrom
6 Multiple levels and multiple challenges for REDD+
Kaisa Korhonen-Kurki, Maria Brockhaus, Amy E. Duchelle, Stibniati Atmadja and Pham Thu Thuy
7 Financing REDD+
Charlotte Streck and Charlie Parker
8 Who should benefit and why? Discourses on REDD+ benefit sharing
Cecilia Luttrell, Lasse Loft, Maria Fernanda Gebara and Demetrius Kweka
9 Tenure matters in REDD+: Lessons from the field
Anne M. Larson, Maria Brockhaus and William D. Sunderlin
10 REDD+ projects as a hybrid of old and new forest conservation approaches
William D. Sunderlin and Erin O. Sills
11 Local hopes and worries about REDD+ projects
Ida Aju Pradnja Resosudarmo, Amy E. Duchelle, Andini D. Ekaputri and William D. Sunderlin
12 Site selection for forest carbon projects
Liwei Lin, Subhrendu K. Pattanayak, Erin O. Sills and William D. Sunderlin
Part 3. Measuring REDD+ performance
13 Performance indicators and REDD+ implementation
Sheila Wertz-Kanounnikoff and Desmond McNeill
14 Baselines and monitoring in local REDD+ projects
Manuel Estrada and Shijo Joseph
15 Emissions factors: Converting land use change to CO2 estimates
Louis V. Verchot, Kamalakumari Anitha, Erika Romijn, Martin Herold and Kristell Hergoualc'h
16 A stepwise framework for developing REDD+ reference levels
Martin Herold, Arild Angelsen, Louis V. Verchot, Arief Wijaya and John Herbert Ainembabazi
17 REDD+ safeguards in national policy discourse and pilot projects
Pamela Jagger, Kathleen Lawlor, Maria Brockhaus, Maria Fernanda Gebara, Denis Jean Sonwa and Ida Aju Pradnja Resosudarmo
18 Summary and conclusions: REDD+ without regrets
Frances Seymour and Arild Angelsen

References (PDF, 356KB)

Appendix: CIFOR's Global Comparative Study on REDD+ (GCS) (PDF, 297KB)
Louis V. Verchot, Maria Brockhaus, William D. Sunderlin and
Arild Angelsen

This publication was made possible with funding from the CGIAR Research Programme, 'Forests, Trees and Agroforestry: Livelihoods, Landscapes and Governance'. The Programme aims to enhance management and use of forests, agroforestry and tree genetic resources across the landscape from forests to farms.