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Sustainability Through an Alternative Property‐Rights Regime for Bangladesh's Mangrove Forest
Authors:Anjan Kumer Dev Roy  Khorshed Alam  Jeff Gow
Institution:1. University of Southern Queensland, , Toowoomba, Australia;2. School of Commerce, Faculty of Business, Education, Law & Arts, University of Southern Queensland, , Toowoomba, Australia;3. School of Accounting, Economics and Finance, University of Southern Queensland, , Toowoomba, Australia;4. Health Economics and HIV/AIDS Research Division, University of KwaZulu‐Natal, , Durban, South Africa
Abstract:This study examines the challenges of achieving sustainable management of the world's largest mangrove forest, the Sundarbans, in Bangladesh. The Sundarbans is currently managed by the Bangladesh Department of Forest, under a state property‐rights regime, while our study explores an alternative property‐rights regime. We employed a mixed‐method approach to examine the prospects of alternative management and livelihood strategies to achieve sustainability. Both focus groups and household surveying were used to assess the opportunities for, and barriers to, achieving sustainability. It was found that two conflicting groups—forest‐dependent communities and foresters—are responsible for policy failures due to the absence of power‐sharing arrangements, nor is it likely a common property‐rights regime will be enough to cap degradation and achieve sustainability, while supply‐and‐demand policy interventions may well could help achieve sustainable management of the Sundarbans.
Keywords:alternative livelihoods  Bangladesh  demand‐side policies  property rights  Sundarbans
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