Community-based conservation in a globalized world
Top Cited Papers
- 25 September 2007
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 104 (39) , 15188-15193
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0702098104
Abstract
Communities have an important role to play in biodiversity conservation. However, community-based conservation as a panacea, like government-based conservation as a panacea, ignores the necessity of managing commons at multiple levels, with vertical and horizontal interplay among institutions. The study of conservation in a multilevel world can serve to inform an interdisciplinary science of conservation, consistent with the Convention on Biological Diversity, to establish partnerships and link biological conservation objectives with local development objectives. Improving the integration of conservation and development requires rethinking conservation by using a complexity perspective and the ability to deal with multiple objectives, use of partnerships and deliberative processes, and learning from commons research to develop diagnostic tools. Perceived this way, community-based conservation has a role to play in a broad pluralistic approach to biodiversity protection: it is governance that starts from the ground up and involves networks and linkages across various levels of organization. The shift of attention to processes at multiple levels fundamentally alters the way in which the governance of conservation development may be conceived and developed, using diagnostics within a pluralistic framework rather than a blueprint approach.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- A diagnostic approach for going beyond panaceasProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Insights on linking forests, trees, and people from the air, on the ground, and in the laboratoryProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Development and conservation: indigenous businesses and the UNDP Equator InitiativeInternational Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business, 2006
- Rethinking Community‐Based ConservationConservation Biology, 2004
- The Struggle to Govern the CommonsScience, 2003
- Innovations for conservation and developmentThe Geographical Journal, 2002
- Conservation and development alliances with the Kayapó of south-eastern Amazonia, a tropical forest indigenous peopleEnvironmental Conservation, 2001
- Linking global and local scales: designing dynamic assessment and management processesGlobal Environmental Change, 2000
- Community Conservation and the Future of Africa's WildlifeConservation Biology, 1999
- Ecosystems and the Biosphere as Complex Adaptive SystemsEcosystems, 1998