Focali

Sections
Forests, climate and livelihoods are interconnected

Forests, climate and livelihoods are interconnected

Forests can play a vital part for both climate- and poverty issues; in reducing the emissions of greenhouse gases and as a source of income for poor people that depend on the forest for their livelihood.

Multifunctional landscapes

Multifunctional landscapes

Many Focali researchers focus on synergies and trade-offs between different land-uses in the landscape, such as interactions between forests and agriculture

Please excuse the dust - we are building a new website

Please excuse the dust - we are building a new website

Focali is rebuilding this website during 2023. All members and partners are not presented on this website. Please contact us if you have any questions or suggestions for the new web!

Welcome to Focali

Focali (Forest, Climate, and Livelihood research network) is a Swedish research network focusing on forest / bio-energy, climate change and poverty issues. Several Swedish universities and institutions are represented in the network. The purpose is to contribute to the provision of relevant knowledge to Sida and other Swedish authorities for the effective use of forest operations to achieve climate-poverty targets. Focali also aims to increase the flow of relevant information between scientists, industry, government and civil society.

For more information about Focali, click here

Focali seminar and mingle in Gothenburg

Focali seminar and mingle in Gothenburg

Focali seminar
Oct 26, 2023 02:30 PM to Oct 26, 2023 04:30 PM.

Seminar on effectiveness of policies aiming to halt tropical deforestation in supply-chains followed by afternoon coffee with time to network with others interested in global forest, land-use, biodiversity, climate and livelihoods issues!

Operationalizing a sustainability transition in tropical forests

Operationalizing a sustainability transition in tropical forests

Seminar
Jun 12, 2023 01:00 PM to Jun 12, 2023 04:30 PM.

This open event, organised by researchers from the Focali network, is open to anyone interested in promoting a transition to sustainability in tropical forests. The event will feature insights from recent research and collaborative work, as well as a panel discussion with actors from different sectors working in tropical forest regions. Discussions will focus on ways forward and how to improve collaboration to tackle deforestation and biodiversity loss while promoting sustainable livelihoods.

Three postdoc-positions in policies for deforestation-free landscapes

Three postdoc-positions in policies for deforestation-free landscapes

Apr 17, 2023

The transdisciplinary research project BEDROCK – “Building an evidence-base for deforestation-free landscapes: supporting equitable outcomes in and beyond commodity supply-chains” is announcing three 3-year postdoc positions.

Focali members receive funding from Formas and Swedish Research Council

Focali members receive funding from Formas and Swedish Research Council

Nov 22, 2022

Focali member Torsten Krause receives over 14 million SEK in funding from Formas for a new project focusing on environmental human rights defenders’ role as change agents. Moreover, member Harry Fischer receives 4.5 million SEK to investigate how community forest governance can impact livelihoods, carbon sequestration, and biodiversity.

A day at Sida: three dialogues on smallholder and Indigenous-led action to the climate, food, and biodiversity crises

A day at Sida: three dialogues on smallholder and Indigenous-led action to the climate, food, and biodiversity crises


Jun 01, 2022 10:45 AM to Jun 01, 2022 04:45 PM.

Join us on the 1st of June at Sida in Stockholm, for a day filled with experiences from the ground on the agency of farmer and forest associations, Indigenous peoples and local communities, youth and women in the climate, biodiversity and food security crises. Three separate but thematically linked dialogues within the field of agriculture, land use, food systems, biodiversity, tenure and rights will be facilitated with a wide range of speakers. In-between the events networking spaces, lunch and coffee will be provided to the participants. The day will thus serve both as dialogue opportunities ahead of Stockholm+50 as associated events and as a forum to initiate much needed deepened collaborations to accelerate global progress towards a more just, resilient, and sustainable future. Focus will be on the situation for and messages from rights holders and their agency in bridging the implementation gaps, from words to action, for a healthy, just and liveable planet. Focali co-arrange the day and the 3rd event: Transforming our Relation with Land and Nature from an Intergenerational Perspective -Indigenous Peoples’ role for a healthy and just planet 2072.

New Focali policy brief: Flawed numbers underpin recommendations to exclude commodities from EU deforestation legislation

New Focali policy brief: Flawed numbers underpin recommendations to exclude commodities from EU deforestation legislation

A leaked draft impact assessment, informing the EU Commission’s coming legislative proposal for minimizing the risk of deforestation and forest degradation associated with products placed on the EU market, has led to recent debate. A key point of contention is the scope of the proposed regulation: the impact assessment recommends that some key forest-risk commodities – maize and rubber – be left out of the regulation. The authors of this new Focali brief show that the analysis that underpins this conclusion has severe flaws and that current evidence does not support such a recommendation.

Focali - SIANI Dialogue report & videos: The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on forest communities and forest resource use

Focali - SIANI Dialogue report & videos: The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on forest communities and forest resource use

Sep 29, 2021

Report, key messages and videos from the Focali - SIANI Dialogue "Impacts of the pandemic on forest communities and forest resource use - What do we know, what do we need to know and how to find out?

Tropical mountain forests store more carbon than expected

Tropical mountain forests store more carbon than expected

Tropical forests in Africa’s mountains store more carbon than previously thought. At the same time, vast amounts of the forests have already been lost. “This draws the attention to the importance of conserving these forests“, says Göran Wallin Focali member at the University of Gothenburg, co-author of the new study published in Nature.

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