Forest Livelihoods, Tribal Institutions & Market Access
Forest Livelihoods, Tribal Institutions & Market Access
Forest-dependent communities operate within layered governance systems that include customary institutions, rights-based legislation, market intermediaries, and environmental regulation. This program examines how forest rights, inclusion, gender dynamics, and market access shape sustainable livelihoods among tribal communities.
Students engage with non-timber forest produce (NTFP) value chains, women’s cooperatives, and forest governance institutions. The itinerary balances field immersion with institutional seminars and national policy framing.
Students will:
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Analyze Forest Rights Act implementation and decentralized governance.
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Conduct value chain mapping for forest-based products.
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Evaluate inclusion, benefit-sharing, and elite-capture dynamics.
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Map tribal institutional decision-making structures.
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Assess ecological sustainability in livelihood diversification.
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Produce a rights-based sustainable livelihoods proposal.
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Development Studies
Political Science
Anthropology
Environmental Governance
Economics
Sustainability
Sociology
Indigenous Studies
Bhubaneswar
Tribal Forest Regions of Odisha
Delhi