Thursday, April 30, 2009

Indian forest service

India is one of the First countries in the world to have stated scientific management of its forests. During the year the then British India Government started the Imperial Forest Department and appointed Dr. Dietrich Brandis, a German Forest officer Inspector General of Forests in . Having recognized the need to have a premier forest service to mange the varied natural resources of the vast country and to organize the affairs of the Imperial Forest Department, Imperial Forest Service was constituted in .

Having realized the importance of a multi tier forest Administration in the federal and provincial Governments for effective management of forest resources the British India Government also constituted Provincial Forest Service and Executive Subordinate Services, which were quite similar to the present day forest administrative hierarchy. The officers appointed to the Imperial Forest Service from were trained in France and Germany. Thereafter, until they were trained at Cooper's Hill, London, which had been one of the prestigious professional colleges of Forestry at that time.

From the Universities of Oxford, Cambridge and Edinburgh had undertaken the task of training the officers of the Imperial Forest Service. The Imperial Forest Research Institute, Dehra Dun, presently & popularly known all over the world as FRI was established at Dehra Dun in the year . The baton to train the IFS officers was passed on to Forest Research Institute, which it did successfully from . Subsequently the Indian Forest College IFC was established in the year at Dehra Dun and the officers recruited to the Superior Forest Service by the provinces states were trained there. The subject of Forestry which was managed by the Federal Government until then, was transferred to the Provincial List by the Government of India Act, and subsequently recruitment to the Imperial Forest Service was discontinued.

The Indian Forest Service, one of the three All India Services, was constituted in the year under the All India Services Act, by the Government of India. The main mandate of the service is the implementation of the National Forest Policy which envisages scientific management of forests and to exploit them on a sustained basis for primary timber products, among other things. Since the management of the forests remained in the hands of the Provincial Governments and even today the Forest Departments are managing the forests of the country under the respective State governments.

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