How to translate text using browser tools
16 December 2019 A Reality Check: Unveiling the Unseen Faces of SRA Compliance in Ghana
E.M. Kumeh, D.K. Abu
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Emerging forest governance regimes emphasise the implementation of social responsibility agreements (SRAs) to enable local communities' access forest rents. While studies have considered SRA implementation in recent years, they are restricted to a few areas and fail to provide insights into wide-scale compliance. This study addresses this by analysing SRA compliance in 36 communities with different forest resource endowments in Ghana. The study found differences in levels SRA compliance with off-reserve actor largely non-compliant. Compliance was motivated by a combination of instrumental, but largely normative factors. Context-specific issues – e.g. low awareness and actor mistrust–enabled non-compliance. The findings suggest that a utopian model and reliance on sanctions alone may not improve SRA compliance in Ghana. Rather, SRAs need to evolve to embrace context-specific norms and the scale of timber contracts. The findings lay a benchmark for SRA compliance monitoring and have extended applications for FLEGT implementation in Ghana and beyond.

E.M. Kumeh and D.K. Abu "A Reality Check: Unveiling the Unseen Faces of SRA Compliance in Ghana," International Forestry Review 21(4), 446-459, (16 December 2019). https://doi.org/10.1505/146554819827906843
Published: 16 December 2019
KEYWORDS
Compliance
FLEGT
Ghana
local communities
Social Responsibility Agreement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top