Social Capital in Biodiversity Conservation and Management
Top Cited Papers
- 10 May 2004
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Conservation Biology
- Vol. 18 (3) , 631-638
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1523-1739.2004.00126.x
Abstract
Abstract: The knowledge and values of local communities are now being acknowledged as valuable for biodiversity conservation. Relationships of trust, reciprocity and exchange, common rules, norms and sanctions, and connectedness in groups are what make up social capital, which is a necessary resource for shaping individual action to achieve positive biodiversity outcomes. Agricultural and rural conservation programs address biodiversity at three levels: agrobiodiversity on farms, nearby nature in landscapes, and protected areas. Recent initiatives that have sought to build social capital have shown that rural people can improve their understanding of biodiversity and agroecological relationships at the same time as they develop new social rules, norms, and institutions. This process of social learning helps new ideas to spread and can lead to positive biodiversity outcomes over large areas. New ideas spread more rapidly where there is high social capital. There remain many practical and policy difficulties, however, not least regarding the need to invest in social capital formation and the many unresolved questions of how the state views communities empowered to make their own decisions. Nonetheless, attention to the value of social relations, in the form of trust, reciprocal arrangements, locally developed rules, norms and sanctions, and emergent institutions, has clearly been shown to deliver a biodiversity dividend in many contexts. This suggests a need to blend both the biological and social elements of conservation.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- History and Application of the Wilderness Concept in Marine ConservationConservation Biology, 2002
- Social Capital and the EnvironmentWorld Development, 2001
- Normative Concepts in Conservation Biology: Reply to Willers and HunterConservation Biology, 2000
- Balancing the Earth's accountsNature, 1999
- Enchantment and Disenchantment: The Role of Community in Natural Resource ConservationWorld Development, 1999
- Social Capital and Communities of Place1Rural Sociology, 1998
- Division of the Commons: A Partial Assessment of the New Institutional Economics of Land RightsAmerican Journal of Agricultural Economics, 1998
- Human Domination of Earth's EcosystemsScience, 1997
- The value of the world's ecosystem services and natural capitalNature, 1997
- Social Capital in the Creation of Human CapitalAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1988