Publication:
Striking the Balance: Adapting Community Forest Enterprise to Meet Market Demands A Case Study of TIP Muebles (Oaxaca, Mexico)

dc.contributor.authorKlooster, D.
dc.contributor.authorTaravella, R.
dc.contributor.authorHodgdon, B.D.
dc.date.accessioned2022-01-23T18:56:14Z
dc.date.available2022-01-23T18:56:14Z
dc.identifier.urihttps://open.fsc.org/handle/resource/739
dc.languageen
dc.rightsPublic
dc.rightsOpen access
dc.titleStriking the Balance: Adapting Community Forest Enterprise to Meet Market Demands A Case Study of TIP Muebles (Oaxaca, Mexico)en
dcterms.abstractMexico is characterized by a strong community forestry sector. The Mexican Revolution (1910-1917) introduced an agrarian reform process implemented in successive waves during the 20th century. Over a period of 70 years, lands nationwide were titled to two types of rural communities – ejidos and indi- genous communities – which now collectively hold an estimated 60.3 percent of the national forest estate. The National Forestry Commission of Mexico (CONAFOR) has identified roughly 9,000 communi- ties who are forest owners, perhaps a third of which have negligible commercial potential (Madrid et al. 2010). Among those communities that have a more sizeable forest resource, over 3,000 manage their forests in accordance with a management plan. Over the past two decades, a transition to greater autonomy in forest management has been con- solidated. Communities throughout the country have extended traditional governance institutions in innovative ways to administer a growing diversity of community forest enterprises (CFE). They have also created complex inter-community alliances to generate economies of scale and undertake joint ventures. Numerous analyses show that successful CFEs substantially contribute to local development, and that community forest management is as effec- tive as protected areas in conserving natural forests and their services (Bray et al. 2007). Nevertheless, making small-scale forestry an eco- nomically competitive land use alternative remains challenging, even in a country like Mexico, where community forestry is relatively advanced. To com- pete with cheap wood imports, not to mention illegal material, community forest enterprises in Mexico need to achieve economies of scale, add value to forest products, and institutionalize sound entrepreneurial practices. A popular strategy for accomplishing this is the creation of second-tier organizations that aggregate production from multiple communities, enable value-added production, and help communities improve quality control, marketing and administra- tive processes. But achieving efficiency for such second-tier organizations is difficult. Challenges include tensions between egalitarian values and entrepreneurial demands, competition between member communities and competition between the second-tier business and its own member communities. This case study analyzes TIP Muebles, a retailer and brand name owned by ICOFOSA, a consortium of indigenous communities in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca involved in managing forests, logging, sawmilling, furniture manufacture and furniture retailing. The central finding of this case study is that it is possible for a second-tier business to strike a balance between community values and market demands. The study also confirms that CFEs can adopt commercially viable business models while maintaining fidelity to values and processes rooted in community institutions.en
dcterms.accessRightsPublic
dcterms.accessRightsOpen access
dcterms.bibliographicCitationKlooster, D., Taravella, R. and Hodgdon, B.D., 2015. Striking the Balance: Adapting Community Forest Enterprise to Meet Market Demands: a Case Study of TIP Muebles,(Oaxaca, Mexico). Multilateral Investment Fund.en
dcterms.issued2015
dcterms.licenseCopyrighted; all rights reserveden
dcterms.otherKlooster, D., Taravella, R. and Hodgdon, B.D., 2015. Striking the Balance: Adapting Community Forest Enterprise to Meet Market Demands: a Case Study of TIP Muebles,(Oaxaca, Mexico). Multilateral Investment Fund.
dcterms.publisherRainforest Alliance
dcterms.typeReport
dspace.entity.typePublication
fsc.evidenceCategoryFSC effect-related studies
fsc.focus.forestTypeNatural Forest
fsc.focus.forestZoneTropical
fsc.focus.forestZoneTemperate
fsc.focus.subtopics(not yet curated)
fsc.focus.sustainDimensionEconomic
fsc.focus.sustainDimensionSocial
fsc.focus.tenureManagement(not yet curated)
fsc.focus.tenureOwnership(not yet curated)
fsc.focus.topics(not yet curated)
fsc.issue.economic(not yet curated)
fsc.issue.social(not yet curated)
fsc.subjectChange in practices
fsc.subjectForests
fsc.subjectCertification
fsc.subjectCAR Analysis
fsc.subjectComparative Analysis
fsc.subjectSFI
fsc.subjectCertfor
fsc.subjectATFS
fsc.subjectPEFC
is.availability.fullTextFull text available
is.contributor.funderTypePrivate funds (NGOs, companies, VSS self-funded etc)
is.contributor.memberRainforest Alliance
is.coverage.countryMexico
is.coverage.countryAlpha2MX
is.coverage.geographicLevelRegion
is.coverage.latitude-102.552784
is.coverage.longitude23.634501
is.coverage.placeOaxaca
is.coverage.regionNorth America
is.evaluation.collectionCompany data
is.evaluation.dataSourcePrivate company data
is.evidenceSubTypeQualitative
is.evidenceTypeCase study
is.focus.productsForestry products
is.focus.sdgSDG 15 - Life on Land
is.focus.sectorsForestry
is.focus.sustainDimensionSocial
is.focus.sustainDimensionEconomic
is.focus.sustainIssueParticipant costs and benefits
is.focus.sustainIssueRights of indigenous peoples and local communities
is.focus.sustainIssueLivelihoods
is.focus.sustainLensCooperatives
is.focus.sustainLensSupply chain benefits
is.focus.sustainOutcomeMarket access
is.focus.sustainOutcomePayment for ecosystem services
is.focus.sustainOutcomeGovernance mechanisms
is.focus.sustainOutcomeAccess to credit
is.focus.systemElementMandE outcomes and impacts
is.focus.systemElementMandE performance monitoring
is.identifier.codeImpacts
is.identifier.fscdoihttp://dx.doi.org/10.34800/fsc-international770
is.identifier.schemeNameForest Stewardship Council
is.identifier.schemeTypeVoluntary Sustainability Standards
is.link.urlhttps://www.rainforest-alliance.org/sites/default/files/2016-08/tip-muebles-case-study.pdf
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