Are poverty and protected area establishment linked at a national scale?
- 2 November 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Oryx
- Vol. 42 (01) , 19-25
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0030605307001044
Abstract
The debate about poverty and conservation draws mainly on local case studies, particularly of the impacts of protected areas. Although it is clear that local and contingent variables have important effects on the social and economic impacts of protected area establishment, it is not known whether there is a general relationship between national wealth and the area, number and type of protected area designated. Here we conduct such an analysis. Our results suggest that wealthy countries have a larger number of protected areas of smaller size than poorer countries. However, we find few significant relationships between indicators of poverty and the extent of protected areas at a national scale. Our analysis therefore confirms that relationships between poverty and conservation action are dynamic and locally specific. This conclusion has implications for opposing positions within the debate on poverty and conservation. Critics of conservation who build upon local case studies to argue that protected areas make a significant contribution to poverty risk exaggerating the scale of the problem. However, conservation advocates also need to temper their enthusiasm. Outcomes in which both poverty alleviation and conservation goals are achieved may be possible in specific circumstances but clear choices will often need to be made between conservation and livelihood goals.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Is poverty more acute near parks? An assessment of infant mortality rates around protected areas in developing countriesOryx, 2008
- Taking Root: Biodiversity Conservation and Poverty Reduction Come Together in the TropicsEnvironment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development, 2005
- Biodiversity Conservation and the Eradication of PovertyScience, 2004
- The social and environmental impacts of wilderness and developmentOryx, 2004
- How Many Chronically Poor People are There in the World? Some Preliminary EstimatesSSRN Electronic Journal, 2004
- Contested relationships between biodiversity conservation and poverty alleviationOryx, 2003
- A new kind of trouble: evictions in Eden*International Social Science Journal, 2003
- Effectiveness of Parks in Protecting Tropical BiodiversityScience, 2001
- Social change and conservation misrepresentation in AfricaOryx, 1998
- The opportunity costs of biodiversity conservation in KenyaEcological Economics, 1995