Governance and natural resources management: emerging lessons from ICRAF-SANREM collaboration in the Philippines

The concept and practice of governance and natural resources management (NRM) is emerging as a popular debate in the Philippines, as in many countries in the region. It is now widely accepted that Local Government Units (LGU) plays a critical role in the management of resources within their jurisdiction. This debate is constructed from a combination of people, processes and structures under a diversity of circumstances. Hence, it is pluralistic in nature that necessitates participation more widely by various civil society sectors, including the scientific community. Our collaborative work with the Sustainable Agriculture and Natural Resources Management-Collaborative Research Support Program for Southeast Asia (SANREM-CRSP/SEA) is a serious attempt to understand better the methodological, institutional and policy hurdles impinging upon the success of local NRM. The experience begun in Lantapan in Phase I of SANREM, with the aim to better integrate environmental knowledge in planning and decision-making at the watershed level. SANREM supported an LGU-led planning process for the development of a five-year Municipal Natural Resources and Development Plan (NRMDP) of Lantapan. The NRMDP was recognized as a national model for locally led and research-based NRM planning by the Philippines’ National Strategy for Watershed Management (DENR-FMB, 1998). Inspired by the Lantapan experience, a scaling-up process was pursued in four municipalities in northern Bukidnon. The recently concluded plans were legitimized with institutional and financial support—embracing the technological, institutional and policy aspects of resource management. We concluded that there are socio-political and technical factors affecting the sustainability of local NRM. Four sustainability factors for successful NRM emerged from our study. These are: clear local financial investment, enhanced local technical capacity, sound political culture conducive to NRM, and a supporting National Mandate. However, to ensure that these conditions are met will require a virtual overhaul of programmatic areas of effective governance, as well as setting a national level policy direction that proactively support the local enforcement of such policies. These factors are in fact, conditions predispose to sustainable NRM at the local level.


Download :
English



Publication year

2022

Resilient Landscapes is powered by CIFOR-ICRAF. Our mission is to connect private and public actors in co-beneficial landscapes; provide evidence-based business cases for nature-based solutions and green economy investments; leverage and de-risk performance-driven investments with combined financial, social and environmental returns.

2025 All rights reserved    Privacy notice