Project video

Community-led restoration across the Global South applying analog forestry

Costa Rica
Restoration, Community, Water
IN
International Analog Forestry Network
Costa Rica
Other

Analog Forestry is a system of ecological restoration that focuses on increasing biodiversity by imitating natural forest systems in order to create economically productive and environmentally mature forests. This methodology builds on traditional forest gardens, which are human-created systems that restore degraded landscapes while providing economic benefits. The organization works through a network of trainers and partners to advance sustainable forest restoration practices globally.

AM
Amigos of Costa Rica
Pennsylvania, United States
Nonprofit

Amigos of Costa Rica is a US nonprofit organization that invites people to invest in communities around Costa Rica by connecting their values and resources with vetted nonprofit solutions. The organization serves as a fiscal sponsor for over 100 Costa Rican nonprofit organizations and ensures responsible fund management through annual reporting. We believe in creating the best possible future for Costa Rica.

Project story

The International Analog Forestry Network is rooted in the belief that healthy ecosystems and thriving communities depend on one another. An ecological restoration approach that mimics the structure and functions of natural forests while supporting sustainable livelihoods. By regenerating forests that provide food, medicine, clean water, biodiversity habitat, and income opportunities, we help communities strengthen both environmental and social resilience.

The environmental challenges includes biodiversity loss, soil degradation, declining water quality, and increasing climate vulnerability. Driven by deforestation, monoculture production systems, and unsustainable land-use practices that weaken ecosystems and threaten the livelihoods of communities that depend directly on natural resources.

Our solution is community-led and grounded in local knowledge. We work with communities to assess ecological conditions, identify priorities, and co-design restoration strategies tailored to their landscapes. Through training, participatory planning, and long-term support, communities establish diverse forest gardens and agroforestry systems that restore ecological functions while generating food and income.
This approach strengthens local stewardship, protects watersheds, improves soil fertility, enhances biodiversity, and creates climate-resilient production systems without harmful external inputs.

In line with our work priorities, IAFN will put the prize money into its continuing efforts at building and strengthening a movement of AF landscape restoration practitioners, by addressing one of its core areas of work: building capacities and engaging with local stakeholders. We will allocate the prize funds to our training centers, which could be used for a variety of purposes, such as nursery development, conduct AF training sessions/programs, community outreach or AF implementation design - monitoring of AF plots. We will support our training centers are located in Costa Rica, Ecuador, Bolivia, Paraguay, Cameroon and Sri Lanka.

Project updates

Team

EA
Eduardo Aguilar-EspinozaInternational Analog Forestry Network, Costa Rica

Location

Costa Rica

This project is part of

Round 3

Jul 1-21, 2026

Supporting community-led nature projects around the world.