Community Forest Management and REDD+: Pathways to Effective Implementation, Livelihood Improvement, and Climate Change Adaptation in Cambodia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
2.1. Drivers of Deforestation and Forest Degradation in Cambodia
2.2. Communities and Their Involvement in Forest Management in Cambodia
2.3. Status of REDD+ Program in Cambodia
2.4. The Legal Framework for REDD+ in Cambodia
3. REDD+ Projects and Community Participation
3.1. Communities’ Roles in Implementing REDD+
3.2. Challenges Associated with Community Participation
3.2.1. Ineffective Implementation of Safeguards and Grievance Redress Mechanisms
3.2.2. Weaknesses in the Application of CFM FPIC
3.3. Addressing the Challenges Associated with Community Participation
4. Forest Tenure, Carbon Rights and Benefit-Sharing Mechanisms
4.1. Forest Tenure and Carbon Rights
4.2. Challenges Associated with Forest Tenure, Carbon Rights and Benefit Sharing
4.2.1. Forest Tenure Issues and Lack of Recognition of Carbon Rights
4.2.2. Unclear Benefit-Sharing Arrangements and Power Imbalances
4.3. Addressing the Challenges Associated with Forest Tenure, Carbon Rights and Benefit Sharing
5. Livelihood Improvement and Climate Change Adaptation
5.1. REDD+, Livelihood Development and Climate Change Adaptation
5.2. Challenges Associated with Livelihood Improvement and Climate Change Adaptation
5.3. Addressing the Challenges Associated with Livelihood Improvement and Climate Change Adaptation
6. Discussion
6.1. REDD+ Governance and Community Participation
6.2. Forest Tenure, Carbon Rights and Benefit-Sharing Mechanisms
6.3. Livelihood Improvement and Climate Change Adaptation
7. Conclusions
- Investing in strengthening local governance structures and institutional capacity to enable effective forest management and REDD+ implementation;
- Strengthening FPIC and participatory processes to enhance participatory decision-making, accountability, and legitimacy;
- Encouraging collaboration between governments, communities, NGOs, and the private sector to foster inclusive and coherent forest governance;
- Coupling legal recognition of tenure with financial support to maintain community commitment;
- Establishing transparent benefit-sharing mechanisms to prevent unfair benefit distribution and promote social inclusion;
- Facilitating access to sustainable financing and carbon markets through blended finance models;
- Distributing funds to the most vulnerable and incorporating adaptive strategies into REDD+ projects to support both livelihood diversification and climate resilience;
- Promoting community-based monitoring systems to support transparent, low-cost, and locally driven monitoring, reporting, and verification processes, curbing illegal forestland clearing for sales and illegal logging;
- Undertaking regular monitoring and evaluation of social and equity outcomes to ensure REDD+ interventions achieve real impacts that address community needs.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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CFM | Description | Number and Size |
---|---|---|
Community Forests | The Cambodian Forestry Law 2007 and Sub-decree No. 79 2003 provide the legal structure for rural communities to participate in forest management through community forestry in forest areas they have traditionally utilized [69,70]. | As of 2023, there are 648 CFs, covering 528,340 hectares [71]. |
Community Protected Areas | CPAs are establishments based on the Guideline on Procedure and Process of Community Protected Area Establishment 2017, issued by the Ministry of Environment. They are areas traditionally managed by communities in the community zone of protected areas [72]. | As of 2022, there are 182 CPAs, covering 309,463 hectares [72]. |
Indigenous Community Land Titling | ICLT is a land titling program developed by the Cambodian Government with support from development partners, aiming to help indigenous communities to formally register with the Ministry of Interior in accordance with the Land Law 2001 and the Sub-decree on Procedures for Registering of Land of Indigenous Communities 2009 [11]. | As of 2022, 40 of Cambodia’s 488 indigenous communities have obtained collective land titles [73]. |
Community Fisheries | Defined by the Fisheries Law 2006 and the Sub-decree on Community Fisheries Management 2007, CFis are fishing domains including mangroves and flooded forests controlled by the state and handed over to communities, who live in and/or around the fishing domain, depend on it for their daily life, and use traditional fishing methods [74]. | As of 2023, there are 516 CFis [74]. |
Safeguard | Clarification of the Cancun Safeguards in Accordance with the Country Context | Core Elements Recognized and Protected in the Implementation of the REDD+ Strategy |
---|---|---|
Safeguard B | The rights of access to information, accountability, justice, gender equality, land tenure, and fair distribution of benefits will be clarified, respected, and promoted in the application of the National REDD+ Strategy. |
|
Safeguard C | The REDD+ Strategy will be implemented in accordance with recognition of, and respect for, the rights of indigenous peoples and local communities, including the rights to non-discrimination, traditional knowledge and culture, self-determination, benefit-sharing, and collective tenure rights. |
|
Safeguard D | The right to participate in an effective manner, including free, prior, and informed consent for relevant indigenous peoples and local communities, will be recognized and promoted under the implementation of the REDD+ Strategy. |
|
No. | REDD+ Project | No. of Villages | No. of Families | No. of CFs | No. of CPAs | No. of ICLT | No. of CFis | Project ID | Size (ha) | Estimated Annual Emission Reduction (Tons CO2e) | Crediting Period | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Oddar Meanchey | 58 | 9915 | 13 | - | - | - | 904 | 63,831 | 204,792 | 2008–2038 | [92] |
2 | Keo Seima | 17 | 2552 | - | 07 | 15 | - | 1650 | 166,983 | 1,426,648 | 2010–2069 | [92] |
3 | Tumring | 19 | 3252 | 16 | - | - | - | 1689 | 67,791 | 378,434 | 2015–2044 | [92] |
4 | Southern Cardamom | 21 | 2475 | 14 | - | - | - | 1748 | 465,839 | 3,867,568 | 2015–2044 | [92] |
5 | Samkos | 22 | 3041 | 06 | - | - | - | 3341 | 282,718 | 1,549,341 | 2019–2049 | [92] |
6 | Lomphat | 32 | 7308 | - | 03 | - | - | 3434 | 134,730 | 239,752 | 2018–2047 | [92] |
7 | Prey Lang | 49 | 13,118 | 03 | 16 | 03 | - | KH005 | 431,683 | 327,653 | 2018–2029 | [93] |
8 | Mangrove Afforestation and Reforestation | - | - | - | - | - | 13 | 5071 | 3000 | 28,650 | 2025–2045 | [92] |
9 | Mekong | 24 | - | 14 | - | - | - | - | 30,526 | 215,549 | - | [94] |
10 | Central Cardamom | 22 | 3296 | 01 | 06 | 17 | - | - | 401,313 | - | 2021–2051 | [95] |
11 | Phnom Thnoat Phnom Pok | * | 42,097 | [96] | ||||||||
12 | Northern Plain | * | 518,130 | [96] |
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Y, C.; Hytten, K.F.; Pearson, D. Community Forest Management and REDD+: Pathways to Effective Implementation, Livelihood Improvement, and Climate Change Adaptation in Cambodia. Land 2025, 14, 1122. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14051122
Y C, Hytten KF, Pearson D. Community Forest Management and REDD+: Pathways to Effective Implementation, Livelihood Improvement, and Climate Change Adaptation in Cambodia. Land. 2025; 14(5):1122. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14051122
Chicago/Turabian StyleY, Chaly, Karen F. Hytten, and Diane Pearson. 2025. "Community Forest Management and REDD+: Pathways to Effective Implementation, Livelihood Improvement, and Climate Change Adaptation in Cambodia" Land 14, no. 5: 1122. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14051122
APA StyleY, C., Hytten, K. F., & Pearson, D. (2025). Community Forest Management and REDD+: Pathways to Effective Implementation, Livelihood Improvement, and Climate Change Adaptation in Cambodia. Land, 14(5), 1122. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14051122