Overseas Development Institute

Events

odi meetings

Rethinking 'good governance'

This series concluded with a half-day meeting on 26 April, 2002.      There is no report for this meeting

Why experience with natural resources challenges the conventional wisdom and how we can do better.

International development assistance is increasingly concerned with good governance. Without good governance, countries are fighting a losing battle to reconcile poverty reduction with environmental objectives. Complicating matters, good governance encompasses a range of issues which can be intangible and hard to measure.

However, perhaps more than any other sector, the forest sector has long struggled with - and thereby given life to - a range of these issues. Experience in the forest sector clearly demonstrates how a combination of inappropriate regulation and weak governance can erode the assets of the poor and increase their vulnerability. What lessons can we learn from the pioneering governance reforms in the forest sector and how can we apply them to promote wider gains in good governance and pro-poor change?

Friday 26 April
from 9.30am
to 12.45pm


Further details
& programme

(pdf format)

Rethinking Good Governance: What can the forestry sector tell us?

  • Jim Douglas, Senior Forestry Adviser at the World Bank
  • Roger Wilson, Chief Governance Adviser at the Department for International Development (DFID)
  • Jeff Sayer, recently retired as foundation Director-General of the Centre for International Forestry (CIFOR), and now Senior Adviser with WWF International
  • Richard Tarasofsky, Senior Fellow, Ecologic - Institute for International and European Environmental Policy, Berlin.
  • Andrew Bennett, Chief Natural Resources Adviser, DFID (Seminar Chair).