Forest repository maintainance system

  • Unique Paper ID: 145783
  • PageNo: 240-243
  • Abstract:
  • Countries adopting forest and land-use-based climate change mitigation policies are investing in infrastructure and capacity to track the impacts of these policies. A major capacity gap is the lack of coordination among ministries and sub-national governments that regulate drivers of forest and land-use change from both inside and outside the forest sector. Improving communication, data integration and data access among institutions is a key step towards identifying land-use policies that can balance a range of cross-sector objectives, and tracking these policies over time. To accomplish this, countries should develop data management systems that integrate spatial and non- spatial data from multiple sources. This working paper focuses on the development of forest and land-use information systems (FLUIS), which are data management systems that integrate forest and land-use data. More specifically, this paper examines the institutional, human resources and financial capacities of three countries — Cameroon, Indonesia and Peru — that have developed a FLUIS, and highlights common enabling factors and challenges.

Copyright & License

Copyright © 2026 Authors retain the copyright of this article. This article is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

BibTeX

@article{145783,
        author = {T VENKATA SIVARAJAN  and Dr. E. Kesavulu Reddy },
        title = {Forest repository maintainance system },
        journal = {International Journal of Innovative Research in Technology},
        year = {},
        volume = {4},
        number = {11},
        pages = {240-243},
        issn = {2349-6002},
        url = {https://ijirt.org/article?manuscript=145783},
        abstract = {Countries adopting forest and land-use-based climate change mitigation policies are investing in infrastructure and capacity to track the impacts of these policies. A major capacity gap is the lack of coordination among ministries and sub-national governments that regulate drivers of forest and land-use change from both inside and outside the forest sector. Improving communication, data integration and data access among institutions is a key step towards identifying land-use policies that can balance a range of cross-sector objectives, and tracking these policies over time. To accomplish this, countries should develop data management systems that integrate spatial and non- spatial data from multiple sources. This working paper focuses on the development of forest and land-use information systems (FLUIS), which are data management systems that integrate forest and land-use data. More specifically, this paper examines the institutional, human resources and financial capacities of three countries — Cameroon, Indonesia and Peru — that have developed a FLUIS, and highlights common enabling factors and challenges.},
        keywords = {},
        month = {},
        }

Cite This Article

SIVARAJAN, T. V., & Reddy, D. E. K. (). Forest repository maintainance system . International Journal of Innovative Research in Technology (IJIRT), 4(11), 240–243.

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