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Common property resource management of an Afro-alpine habitat : supporting a population of the critically endangered Ethiopian wolf (Canis simensis)Ashenafi, Zelealem Tefera January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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Using human-environment theory to investigate human valuing in protected area managementInglis, Judi, January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Victoria University (Melbourne, Vic.), 2008. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Factors affecting communities' participation in natural resource conservation.Chou, Chia-hui 26 August 2005 (has links)
none
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Beyond Community: "Global" Conservation Networks and "Local" Organization in Tanzania and ZanzibarDean, Erin January 2007 (has links)
This dissertation explores the complex structures and diverse experiences of globalization through the specific analytical lens of community-based natural resource management (CBNRM). CBNRM is an undertaking which is fundamentally local but also integrally connected to transnational conservation ideology and national structures of authority. While recent critiques of community-based conservation projects have challenged the universal efficacy of the approach, CBNRM continues to be a ubiquitous conservation paradigm and to provide lingering hope for local empowerment through resource management. Focusing on two community-based conservation groups formed in Tanzania and Zanzibar, this dissertation looks at the experience of local groups attempting to engage with broader national or international conservation networks by focusing on three tropes of globalization theory: intersections between traditional ecological knowledge and western science, the relationship between civil society and the state, and the specific mechanisms for local engagement with national and global entities. The community groups in this study use dynamic and adaptive strategies to channel resources into their communities. However, they also face significant structural constraints, many of which reveal the neocolonial effects of transnational conservation ideology. This work explores both the factors limiting or manipulating local participation in resource management and the strategies used by these two community-based conservation groups to ensure their participation in spite of those limitations.
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Community Based Wildlife Management : its Role in Conservation and DevelopmentTynnerson, Sara January 2009 (has links)
<p>Tanzania has exceptional wildlife, environment and natural resources. The traditional way of conserving nature and wildlife has been through parks and reserves. In the 1980’s community based conservation emerged as a resource management paradigm. Its premise was that giving local people a stake in wildlife would increase their incentive to conserve it. This would make wildlife an important engine of local economic development. The core elements in community based conservation projects concern development, conservation and sustainable land use. Its ambition both to improve conditions for the local communities and conserve wildlife seems like a win-win situation, but has this really been working that well when applied in the field? This study aims to review the Community Based Wildlife Management in Tanzania, exemplified by a case study in the Wildlife Management Area in Burunge, located in a migration corridor between two national parks. There has been much controversy surrounding community-based management projects. While gains for the local communities have not always been clear, gains for wildlife seem more evident. Both species numbers and individuals have increased, but at the same time there has also been increasing conflicts between locals and wildlife. This is a sign that the WMAs are only halfway to towards reaching their goal of improving conditions for both communities and wildlife. CBC stills seems like the way forwards, maybe in a modified form which allows more government control, but where local people’s rights are still respected.</p>
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Community Based Wildlife Management : its Role in Conservation and DevelopmentTynnerson, Sara January 2009 (has links)
Tanzania has exceptional wildlife, environment and natural resources. The traditional way of conserving nature and wildlife has been through parks and reserves. In the 1980’s community based conservation emerged as a resource management paradigm. Its premise was that giving local people a stake in wildlife would increase their incentive to conserve it. This would make wildlife an important engine of local economic development. The core elements in community based conservation projects concern development, conservation and sustainable land use. Its ambition both to improve conditions for the local communities and conserve wildlife seems like a win-win situation, but has this really been working that well when applied in the field? This study aims to review the Community Based Wildlife Management in Tanzania, exemplified by a case study in the Wildlife Management Area in Burunge, located in a migration corridor between two national parks. There has been much controversy surrounding community-based management projects. While gains for the local communities have not always been clear, gains for wildlife seem more evident. Both species numbers and individuals have increased, but at the same time there has also been increasing conflicts between locals and wildlife. This is a sign that the WMAs are only halfway to towards reaching their goal of improving conditions for both communities and wildlife. CBC stills seems like the way forwards, maybe in a modified form which allows more government control, but where local people’s rights are still respected.
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Twenty-five Years of Sea Turtle Protection in Brazil: Evaluating Local EffectsPegas, Fernanda V. 16 January 2010 (has links)
This study evaluated how three conservation approaches implemented by the
Brazilian Sea Turtle Conservation Program (the TAMAR Project) are related to local
support for sea turtle conservation in Praia do Forte, Brazil. Four species of sea turtles
nest in Praia do Forte. In Praia do Forte, locals harvested sea turtles for their meat and
eggs on a regular basis to support subsistence needs. The three conservation strategies
analyzed are employment opportunities and alternative sources of income from sea turtle
ecotourism; enforcement of federal sea turtle protection laws; and implementation of
environmental education programs via sea turtle ecotourism. These conservation
strategies, which are implemented since 1982, represent both top-down and bottom-up
conservation paradigms.
Qualitative and quantitative data were gathered through nine months of fieldbased
research (between May 2006 and September 2008), using tools of participant
observation, semi-structured interviews, and key informant interviews.
Results indicate that conservation strategies implemented by TAMAR seem to
influence local support for sea turtle conservation. Income and environmental education
programs to the local children are cited as the main benefits sea turtle conservation
brings to the community. Enforcement caused resentment when first implemented, but is
now perceived as a necessary strategy to protect sea turtles. The relative lack of
community participation in sea turtle conservation seems not to have hampered local
support for sea turtle conservation. In fact, the majority of respondents perceive TAMAR as the most appropriate entity to manage sea turtles, and only a minority
believes the community should co-manage sea turtle conservation with TAMAR.
Though these three conservation strategies seem to help maintain traditional ecological
knowledge, the future of this knowledge across generations is uncertain.
Though community-based sea turtle conservation is working at the community
scale, external factors associated with tourism development at the larger scale seem to
influence both livelihoods and sea turtle survival. On a negative side, larger scale
tourism development is associated with an increase in the cost of living, the introduction
of drugs, violence and greater sense of insecurity, changes in the local fishing culture,
and with ongoing threats to sea turtle survival. Tourism development is associated with
benefits as well, including improvements in the local infrastructure, employment
opportunities, and alternative sources of income.
Since tourism development, at both local and regional scales, is unlikely to
decrease any time soon, sea turtle survival no longer solely depends in getting local
support for sea turtle conservation, but also in addressing the external factors that drive
conservation and consumption of sea turtles. Overall, sea turtle ecotourism is one part of
a larger strategy for meeting local socioeconomic needs while also protecting sea turtles
in Praia do Forte.
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The city as a community-based force for sustainability in energy systemsHughes, Kristen. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Delaware, 2009. / Principal faculty advisor: John Byrne, School of Urban Affairs & Public Policy. Includes bibliographical references.
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Is bigger better? The impact of marine protected area expansion on community-based conservationBrooks, Fiona 26 February 2013 (has links)
Global, national and local institutions are adopting coastal management strategies that attempt to facilitate conservation without undermining socioeconomic development. Recently, two global conservation trends have developed that attempt to address prevailing issues of poverty and environmental degradation – community-based conservation and conservation networks. Using a political ecology lens, I examine the intersection of these trends in the local context of Pemba Island. Through fieldwork, textual analysis and literature reviews, I investigate how a community-based conservation association has been impacted by the establishment of a marine conservation network. In theory, community-based conservation and marine conservation networks offer solutions to the failures of fortress conservation and sectoral management. In practice, this case study demonstrates that these lofty objectives are difficult to achieve. These findings contribute to emerging research into the social dynamics of scaling up marine conservation areas and suggest that the success of marine conservation networks hinges on meaningful community participation.
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Motivations for Community-based Conservation: A case from Odisha, IndiaZachariah Chaligné, Alex 19 January 2016 (has links)
Community-based conservation includes natural resource or biodiversity protection by, for
and with the local community. However, surprisingly little is known about what enables
community-based conservation. The aim of this research was to explore and identify potential
motivations of a community-based organization in choosing, in this case, conservation of
endangered olive ridley sea turtles (Lepidochelys olivacea) as their flagship project. Samudram
Women’s Federation, a State-level organization working with small-scale fishing communities in
Odisha, India, was used as a case to explore questions around collective action for communitybased
conservation. Using qualitative methodologies, the study analyzed how the interactions and
interests of multiple actors shaped the goals and activities for the conservation initiative.
Government prohibition of killing turtles, or any other single factor, could not explain conservation
behavior. Rather, many complementary factors (economic, political, environmental, social cultural
and spiritual) enabled and/or motivated community conservation and environment / February 2016
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