An Analysis of non-state and state approaches for forest certification in Mexico

Author(s): Garc�a-Montiel, E. Cubbage, F.W. Rojo-Alboreca, A. Lujan-�lvarez, C. Montiel Antuna, E.
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Publication Year: 2017
Publication Type: Journal Article
Source: Forests
Code:
Access to the Study:
Permanent Resource Identifier: Open link
FSC Resource Identifier: Open link
Collections: FSC Research Portal
Abstract

Mexico has had a non-state forest certification system under the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) since it was initiated in 1993, and developed a new state-sponsored Mexican Forest Certification System (MFCS) that began in 2008. Several analyses have been made of FSC forest certification in Mexico, but none have summarized the new MFCS system or compared its standards with FSC. We compare the implementation of the non-state FSC market forest certification with the state-sponsored MFCS system in Mexico, and review literature on forest certification, focusing on all studies in Mexico. MFCS has had substantial enrollment of more than 902,802 ha by 2016, compared to 900,388 ha for the more-established FSC program. MFCS can be acceptable for stand-alone forest certification, and might be viewed as a stepwise path to FSC certification. The merits of both systems are analyzed in terms of standard content, likely sustainable forestry practices, access to markets, and community forestry enterprises.

Summary
Description
Citation
Sustainability dimension(s): Economic Environmental Social
Topics: Market
Subtopics: Demand
Subject Keywords: Civil Society Forests Social Theory
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Regions: North America
Countries: Mexico
Forest Zones: Tropical, Temperate
Forest Type: Natural Forest, Plantation
Tenure Ownership: (not yet curated)
Tenure Management: (not yet curated)
Evidence Category: FSC effect-related studies
Evidence Type: Synthesis paper
Evidence Subtype: Systematic review
Data Type: (not yet curated)