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CEESP
publications |
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Policy
Matters, the journal of CEESP |
|
Policy
Matters Issue No. 15,
July 2007
Conservation
and Human Rights
(entire
document, 7.38 MB)
For
easier downloading this issue has been divided into
the following files:
Cover,
Table of contents and letter from the Chair and Editorial
Section
I: What ARE human rights anyway?
Section
II: Conservation can undermine human rights...
Section
III: ... but conservation and human rights can also work in mutual support ...
Section
IV: ... within, and only within, a supportive enabling environment ...
Section
V: Book Reviews
Section
VI: CEESP News and Events
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|
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Policy
Matters Issue No. 14, March
2006
Poverty,
wealth and conservation
(entire
document, 10.01 MB) |
|
For
easier downloading this issue has been divided into
the following files:
Cover,
Table of contents and letters from the Chair and Editors
Section
I: Policy that matters!
Section
II: Livelihoods and conservation- arguments shaping
the debate
Section
III: The intertwined roots of poverty, wealth and environmental
degradation
Section
IV: Conservation can end up enhancing poverty
Section
V: ...but conservation can also provide livelihood benefits...
Section
VI: ...if initiatives embrace rights, secure access
to resources and real participation.. (part
1 and part
2)
Section
VII: Resources from CEESP members
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|
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Policy Matters Issue No. 13, November 2004
Special
issue for the World Conservation Congress
History,
Culture & Conservation
(entire
document, 7.08 MB) |
|
|
For
easier downloading this issue has been divided into
the following files:
Table
of Contents and letters from the Chair and Editors
Section
I: Conservation as cultural and political practice (part
1 and part
2)
Section
II: A cultural approach to conservation?
(part 1
and part
2)
Section
III: Understanding and measuring biocultural diversity
Section
IV: New resources from CEESP members |
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Policy
Matters Issue No. 12, September 2003
Special
issue for the World Parks Congress
Community
Empowerment for Conservation
(entire document, 6 MB) |
|
For
easier downloading this issue has been divided into
the following files of less than 800 Kb each:
Cover
and Table of Contents
Section
1: The complexities of governing protected areas
Section
1 (part 1)
Section
1 (part 2)
Section
1 (part 3)
Section
2: The civil society speaks out!
Section
3: CCAs and CMPAs: A full spectrum of learning and struggles
Section
3 (part 1)
Section
3 (part 2)
Section
3 (part 3)
Section
3 (part 4)
Section
3 (part 5)
Section
3 (part 6)
Section
3 (part 7)
Section
4: New resources for CEESP members |
|
|
Policy
Matters Issue No. 11, September 2003
Special
issue for the 5th WTO Ministerial Meeting, Cancun
Trade,
Environment and Investment: Cancun and beyond
(entire document, 1.5
MB) |
| For
easier downloading this issue has been divided into the
following sections:
Cover,
Table of Contents and Letters from the Editor and Chair
Section
1: Trade, Biodivesity and Environment: Crafting the
link
Section
2: Environment and Trade Regimes: Relations and linkages
Section
3: Regional and national focus
Section
4: Trade and IUCN
Letters
to the editor, Network News, Events at Cancun and beyond,
CEESP Steering Committee |
|
|
Issue
No. 10, September 2002
Special
issue for the World Summit on Sustainable Development
Sustainable
Livelihoods and Co-management of Natural Resources
(joint issue with CM News 6), (entire
document, 2.9 MB) |
|
Table
of Contents
Section
1 - Policy affects livelihoods!
Section
2 - Community organizing and action
Section
3 - Co-managing the sources of livelihoods
Section
4 - Learning from practice
Section
5 - New resources from CEESP members |
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Issue
No. 9, May 2002
Environment
& Security: Why Nature is a Matter of Survival |
|
Issue
No. 8, October 2001
Sturgeon
Issue |
|
Issue
No. 7,
August 2000
Ecospace
Issue |
|
Issue
No. 6, December 1999
Governance
Issue |
|
Issue
No. 5, July 1999
Sustainable
Livelihoods Issue |
|
Issue
No. 4,
Spring 1999
Climate
Change Issue
|
|
Issue
No. 3, Autumn 1998
Environment
and Security Issue |
|
Issue
No. 2, Spring 1998
Trade
- Special Issue |
|
Issue
No. 1, Spring 1998 |
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| CEESP
Occasional Papers Series |
|
|
Agroecology
versus Ecoagriculture:
balancing food production and biodiversity conservation
in the midst of social inequity (CEESP Occasional
Paper, No. 3, November 2004)
By
Miguel A. Altieri
Click
here to download
Read
a response to this article by Sara Scherr, Director
of the Ecoagriculture Partners.
|
|
|
Tchim
Tchieto: Fierté de la Cogestion (CEESP Occasional
Paper, No. 2)
Au
coeur de la biodiversité d'Afrique Centrale,
les communautés locales ont fait du Parc National
de Conkouati-Douli leur propre aire protégée,
s'étendant de la côte océanique
aux montagnes forestières du Mayombe.
Par
Christian Chatelain, Marcel Taty et Grazia Borrini-Feyerabend
Download
entire
document (2.7 MB) or in 3 parts: part
1 (1 MB), part
2 (1.1 MB) and part
3 (600 Kb)
Summaries
of this document are available in French,
Spanish and English. |
|
|
Natural
protected areas and social marginalization in Mexico
(entire
document, 800 Kb) Alejandro Nadal Egea |
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|
CEESP
Themes and Working Groups |
|
Theme
on Governance, Equity and Rights
(ex-Collaborative Management Working Group )
|
|
The
following publications are authored (or contributed
to) by members of the Theme
on Governance, Equity and Rights (go
to the TGER Website)
|
|
Newsletters
and Journals |
| |
| CM
News - Issue No. 8 November 2004,
joint issue with Policy Matters no. 13, History, Culture
and Conservation |
| CM
News - Issue No. 7 September 2003,
joint issue with Policy Matters Issue No. 12, Community
Empowerment for Conservation |
|
CM
News - Issue No. 6 September
2002, joint issue with Policy Matters Issue No.
10, Sustainable
Livelihoods and Co-management of Natural Resources |
|
CM
News - Issue
No. 5 October 2001, Newsletter
of the IUCN Collaborative Management Working Group |
|
CM
News - Issue
No. 4 September 2000,
Newsletter of the IUCN Collaborative Management Working
Group |
|
CM
News - Issue
No. 3 December 1999, Newsletter
of the IUCN Collaborative Management Working Group |
 |
"Conservation
Partnerships in Africa", PARKS, Volume 13 No.
1 (joint issue with CEESP/TILCEPA)
Editorial
- From guns and fences to paternalism to
partnerships: the slow disentangling of Africas
protected areas, by Grazia Borrini-Feyerabend and
Trevor Sandwith
The
papers in this volume offer a glimpse of the historical
disentangling of African protected areas
from the old protectionist approach into a more open
and collaborative management style, along the road to
real partnerships.
Pages
1-27 (pdf format)
Pages 28-49
(pdf format)
Pages 50-80
(pdf format) |
|
|
"Local
communities and protected areas", PARKS,
Volume 12 No. 2, 2002. (joint
issue with CEESP/TILCEPA) |
|
http://iucn.org/themes/wcpa/pubs/pdfs/PARKS/parks12.2.pdf
This issues of PARKS has been guest edited by TILCEPA/
CMWG members and produced as part of the CEESP/ WCPA
collaboration. It contains the article on "rethinking
the relationship between indigenous and local communities
and protected areas" that proposes a new "governance
type" dimension for the IUCN protected area category
system, and thus a formal recognition of Community Conserved
Areas. |
|
People
in charge! The emerging face of conservation, special
issue on collaborative management of World Conservation,
IUCN, August 1996. |
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|
Books |
 |
COMANEJO
- Una reflexión conceptual desde Coope Sol i
Dar R. L.
Patricia
Madrigal Coldero, Vivienne Solis Rivera
Este
documento tiene como
objetivo el servir como un vehículo de información
sobre la discusión que se ha dado a nivel global,
regional y local, en torno a la participación
de diferentes sectores sociales en la conservación
de las áreas protegidas. |
|
|
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SHARING
POWER
Learning by doing in Co-Management of Natural Resources
throughout the World
by
Grazia Borrini-Feyerabend, Michel Pimbert, M. Taghi
Farvar, Ashish Kothari and Yves Renard
with Hanna Jaireth, Marshall Murphree, Vicki Pattemore,
Ricardo Ramirez and Patrizio Warren |
|
This
book is designed to support professionals and citizens
at large who wish both to better understand collaborative
management processes and to develop and enhance them
in practice. The experience of social actors learning
by doing and improving their management practices on
an on-going basis has informed this book, together with
the complex and inspiring ways by which the surrounding
socio-political conditions can be improved through participatory
democracy.
Click
here for download and ordering
information for Sharing Power. |
|
 |
Innovative
Governance: Indigenous Peoples, Local Communities and
Protected Areas
Eds.
Hanna Jaireth and Dermot Smyth. Ane Books, New Delhi,
2003. |
|
Innovative
Governance: Indigenous Peoples, Local Communities and
Protected Areas analyses progressive laws and policies
for protected areas and aims to promote law reform and
policy transfer by public and private institutions and
individuals across jurisdictions.
The book explores diverse innovations in protected area
governance globally. Adrian Phillips's introductory
chapter highlights various innovations exemplified in
later chapters. These include the wide range of actors
that can now designate and manage protected areas, particularly
community conserved areas (CCAs); the broader scale
being taken to the designation and management of protected
areas (embracing bioregional planning, multiple tenures
and transboundary jurisdictions); and the extension
of the concept of protected areas to include lived-in
productive landscapes.
Orders
for the book may be placed with Sunil Saxena, Ane Books,
4821 Parwana Bhawan, 1st Floor, 24 Ansari Road, Darya
Ganj, Delhi - 110002, Fax : 23276863, E-mail: anebooks@vsnl.com.
The price is US$15 per copy (with a 30% discount for
IUCN members) plus US$10 for airmail.
For further information please contact the editors Hanna
Jaireth <lawjs@ozemail.com.au>
or Dermot Smyth <erus@tpg.com.au>. |
|
 |
EQUIDAD
ENTRE AREAS PROTEGIDAS Y COMUNIDADES LOCALES: REFLEXION
DESDE MESOAMÉRICA Y EL CARIBE
ELABORADO POR CoopeSolidar, R.L.: Vivienne Solis Rivera,
Patricia Madrigal Cordero, Ivannia Ayales Cruz, Marvin
Fonseca Borras. |
pp.
1-7 (PDF, 805 KB)
pp.
8-35 (PDF, 870 KB)
pp.
36-69 (PDF, 649 KB)
|
| Publications
authored or co-authored by CMWG members |
|
Though
All Things Differ: Pluralism As a Basis for Cooperation
in Forests, by Eva Wollenberg, Jon Anderson and
Citlalli Lopez,Center for International Forestry Research
(CIFOR), Indonesia, 2005
Pluralism is a political belief that acknowledges individuals
rights to pursue their interests, but requires society
to resolve differences where they infringe upon each
other. This guide shows how pluralism helps people to
value social differences and provides clear principles
and rules about how to coordinate those differences.
The guide reviews pluralisms origins, key elements
and strengths and weaknesses. It examines how people
think about differences, including the psychological
obstacles that cause us to exclude or ignore others.
Practices are examined with examples drawn from forest-related
contexts: legal pluralism, multistakeholder processes
and diversity in work teams. Questions are provided
to help the reader assess and practice pluralism in
their own settings. The guide concludes that understanding
the political assumptions and principles of pluralism
can enrich our understanding of current practices to
develop fundamentally new approaches to forest decision-making.
Printed
version available from: http://www.cifor.cgiar.org/scripts/newscripts/publications/detail.asp?pid=1805
If
you need hardcopy(ies) of the book please send your
address to Dina Hubudin at D.Hubudin@cgiar.org
|
|
Participatory
3-Dimensional Modelling: Guiding Principles and Applications,
by Giacomo Rambaldi and Jasmin Callosa-Tarr, ASEAN Regional
Centre for Biodiversity Conservation, Philippines. July
2002
This Publication (and enclosed multimedia resource kit)
is intended to assist researchers, project managers,
Participatory Learning and Action (PLA) and GIS practitioners
in enhancing the capacities of marginalised, isolated,
and frequently natural resource-dependent communities
to deal with spatial data and to communicate with the
"outside world" on a peer to peer basis. Participatory
3-D models integrate people's knowledge and conventional
spatial information like contour lines, to produce stand-alone
scaled relief models that have proved to be user-friendly
and relatively accurate data storage and analysis devices,
and excellent media easing communication between local
stakeholders and external agencies. P3DM is a relatively
new facilitation method used in processes related to
resource use and tenure and has been conceived to support
collaborative initiatives in problem analysis and decision-making.
Information on how to obtain copies of the kit is found
at:
http://www.iapad.org/p3dm_guiding_principles.htm |
|
Biodiversity
and Traditional Knowledge: Equitable Partnerships in
Practice
by Laird, S.A. WWF, UNESCO and Kew Royal Botanic Gardens,
London, 2002
Biodiversity research and prospecting are long-standing
activities taking place in a new legal and ethical environment.
Following entry into force of the Convention on Biological
Diversity in 1993, and other recent policy developments,
expectations and obligations for research and prospecting
partnerships have changed. However, to date there are
few guides to integrating these concepts with practice.
This book offers practical guidance on how to arrive
at equitable biodiversity research and prospecting partnerships.
Drawing on experience and lessons learned from around
the world, it provides case studies, analysis and recommendations
in a range of areas that together form a new framework
for creating equity in these partnerships. They include
researcher codes of ethics, institutional policies,
community research agreements, the design of more effective
commercial partnerships and biodiversity prospecting
contracts, the drafting and implementation of national
'access and benefit-sharing' laws, and institutional
tools for the distribution of financial benefits.
Printed versions available from http://www.earthscan.co.uk |
|
PLA
Notes 40: Deliberative Democracy and Citizen Empowerment,
Pimbert, M. and T. Wakefield (eds.), PLA Notes 40, IIED,
London, 2001.
This issue of PLA Notes focuses on how to engage "the
public" in policy formulation. There is increasing
interest in ideas regarding good governance, deepening
democracy and citizen empowerment, particularly on how
to bring the public or "lay" perspectives
into areas where traditionally they had little or no
involvement. This issue draws together some key thinking
around public participation, using a range of techniques
know as "Deliberative and Inclusive Processes"
(DIPs), Citizen Juries, Citizen Conferences and the
like. The majority of experiences with these processes
has been in the North, although increasingly these are
being adopted and adapted to the South
Printed versions available from www.iied.org |
|
Conservation
and development - New insights and lessons learnt,
Agersnap, H. and M. Funder (eds.), The Environment and
Development Network, CARE Denmark, Copenhagen, 2001.
This book presents papers from two seminars held in
Denmark in May 2002 which explord ways of coming to
terms with the complex relationships involved in aid
initiatives aspiring to combine conservation and development
objectives.
Printed versions available from www.ed-net.de |
|
Land,
people and forests in Eastern and Southern Africa at
the beginning of the 21st century: the impact of land
relations on the role of communities in forest future
by Wily, L. and S.; Mbaya, IUCN EARO, Nairobi, 2001.
This book deals with forest management and land tenure
issues. It advocates for community empowerment and appropriate
legislation supporting it.
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
|
Communities
and forest management in Western Europe a report of
the IUCN Working Group on Community Involvement in Forest
Management with recommendations to the Intergovernmental
Panel on Forests by Jeanrenaud, S, (ed), Ford Foundation,
DFID, WWF and IUCN Gland (Switzerland), 2001.
This Regional Profile of the Working Group on Community
Involvement in Forest Management sets out an historical
and institutional context analysis of forest management
in the region and provides case examples and lessons
for action. Featured countries include Italy, Sweden,
Portugal, Scotland, Finland and France.
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
|
Community
Wildlife Management in Southern Africa: Challenging
the Assumptions of Eden by Fabricius, C., E. Koch
and H. Magome, IIED, London, 2001
An analysis of case studies of community involvement
in the management of wildlife with emphasis on lessons
learned for action.
Printed versions available from www.IIED.org |
|
Beyond
Fences: Seeking Social Sustainability in Conservation
(2 vols: a 'process companion' and a 'reference book')
by Borrini-Feyerabend, G. (ed. with D. Buchan), IUCN,
Gland (Switzerland) and Cambridge (UK), 1997 (reprinted,
2000). http://www.iucn.org/themes/spg/beyond_fences/beyond_fences.html
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html.
Understanding and managing the concerns of local people
is essential for the success of most, if not all, conservation
initiatives. These two volumes are a resource set designed
to help professionals employed in conservation initiatives
to identify the social concerns that are relevant for
their work, assess options for action and implement
them. The first volume is a companion to a process of
planning, evaluating or redesigning a conservation initiative.
It can be used in a series of workshops by the staff
and partners involved in field-based conservation. The
second volume is a reference book. It can be consulted,
as needed, at various stages in the process accompanied
by the first volume. It includes "concept files"
written by eminent conservation and social science scholars
and practitioners, detailed descriptions of methods
and tools (for social communication, participatory evaluation
and planning, conflict management, etc.) and a myriad
of practical examples illustrating the results achieved
when the "options for action" described in
volume 1 were actually set to practice. |
|
Co-management
of natural resources : organising, negotiating and learning-by-doing
by Borrini-Feyerabend, G., M.T. Farvar, J.C. Nguinguiri
and V.A. Ndangang, IUCN/GTZ, Heidelberg (Germany), 2000.
This volume is designed to assist facilitators and partners
of co-management processes. It provides guidelines for
multi-stakeholder management of natural resources and
describes in detail relevant concepts, methods and tools.
The emphasis is on practical approaches and advice,
in line with the experience gained in field initiatives
promoted by GTZ and IUCN in Central Africa and elsewhere.
The test is accompanied by definition boxes, example
boxes, checklists, annexes illustrating participatory
methods and tools of particular relevance for co-management
processes, lessons learned, tips for action and a list
of references and suggested readings.
Downloadable in English, French and Spanish from:
http://nrm.massey.ac.nz/changelinks/cmnr.html
Printed versions available in English, French and Spanish
(and soon in Arabic) from: michaela.hammer@gtz.de |
|
Indigenous
and traditional peoples and protected areas : principles,
guidelines and case studies, by Beltrßn, J.
(ed.), IUCN, Gland (Switzerland), 2000.
It is sometimes assumed that protected areas must be
in conflict with the rights and traditions of indigenous
and other traditional peoples on their domains. In reality,
where indigenous peoples are interested in the conservation
and traditional use of their lands, waters, territories
and the natural and cultural resources that they contain,
conflicts need not arise. Formal protected areas can
provide a means to recognise and guarantee the efforts
of many communities who have long protected certain
areas, such as sacred groves and mountains. This publication
provides a framework for developing partnerships between
indigenous and other traditional peoples and protected
area managers. It contains a number of case studies
giving examples from different parts of the world on
successful experiences on the application of these principles
Printed versions available from
http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
|
Where
Communities Care: Community Wildlife and Ecosystem Management
in South Asia by Kothari, A., N.Pathak and F. Vania,
Kalpavriksh and IIED, London, 2000.
Where Communities Care is the full regional review of
community wildlife management in South Asia. It provides
in-depth country studies covering Bangladesh, Bhutan,
India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka describing the
history of conservation, the move to CWM and 18 key
project case studies. ~These country studies and the
main themes that arise together with the impacts of
CWM and its constraints and challenges are then discussed.
Impacts are gauged at four levels: ecological, economic
& livelihood, social/political and policy. It is
suggested that there is 'overwhelming evidence' to indicate
positive ecological impacts due to CWM in the region
and in addition it has 'helped to enhance the livelihood
security of communities'. This has been supported by
enabling policies and developmental inputs. In many
CWM sites in India, for example, communities have taken
back virtual control over the surrounding natural resources,
and many indirect as well as direct benefits have been
achieved.
Printed versions available from http://kalpavriksh0.tripod.com
and iied.org |
|
Indigenous
Peoples and Protected Areas in South and Southeast Asia
by Colchester, M. and C. Erni (eds.), IWGIA, Copenhagen,
2000.
This book compiles the insights, discussions and recommendations
that were the outcome of the presentation of 12 case
studies at a very productive and highly intensive conference
in Kundasang, Malaysia, in December 1998. By focusing
on case studies, the goal was to encourage a problem-solving
approach which takes into account both the principles
regarding indigenous peoples' involvement in the establishment
of protected areas and the actual political, social,
economic, cultural and environmental contexts in which
protected areas and indigenous peoples are situated.
The case studies analyse a wide range of interactions
between indigenous peoples and protected areas, from
the old-style national parks, which have expelled indigenous
peoples, to more recent initiatives that try to accommodate
indigenous interests and even respect indigenous rights.
The book is a valuable contribution to the discussion
of indigenous peoples' and protected areas.
Printed versions available from www.IWGIA.org |
|
Public
Participation in Forestry in Europe and North America,
Report of the FAO/ECE/ILO Joint Committee Team of Specialists
on Participation in Forestry, ILO, Geneva, 2000.
This report, co-produced by the CMWG member Andrea Finger,
explores the concept and practice of public participation
in forest management and is backed by numerous case
studies. Featured countries include Denmark, Finland,
France, Iceland, Russia, Slovakia, Switzerland, Scotland,
Spain and Portugal.
Printed versions available from www.ilo.org |
|
Joint
Protected Area Management: A Simple Guide by Apte,
T. and A. Kothari, Kalpavriksh, Delhi, 2000.
A question and answer document drawing lessons from
joint forest management towards joint protected area
management in India and beyond.
Printed versions available from http://kalpavriksh0.tripod.com |
|
Establishing
and strengthening local communities' and indigenous
people's participation in the management of wetlands,
Ramsar Convention Bureau, Gland (Switzerland) 2000.
This documents reports from the 7th Conference of the
Contracting Parties of the RAMSAR convention held in
San José (Costa Rica) in 1999. It includes both
case studies of community involvement in the management
of wetlands and policy recommendations.
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
Manual
on Participatory 3-D Modelling for Natural Resource Management,
by Giacomo Rambaldi and Jasmine Callosa, Essentials
of Protected Area Management in the Philippines, Vol.
7 - September 2000
The manual is intended to assist Participatory Learning
and Action practitioners, non-governmental and other civil
society organizations, scientific institutions and others
who would find "community-based 3-D modelling"
a powerful tool enabling local stakeholders to express
their views and assert their rights and play a tangible
role in collaborative natural resource management. The
manual's content and format are designed for practitioners
who would like to plan and facilitate the preparation
of 3-D models through a community-based process and for
those wanting to bring the potentials of Geographic Information
Systems (GIS) at grassroots level. The P3DM process and
its output (the scaled relief model) are the foundations
upon which participatory GIS can release its full potential.
Printed version available from: http://www.iapad.org/publications.htm |
|
Communities
and forest management in South Asia a report of the
IUCN Working Group on Community Involvement in Forest
Management with recommendations to the Intergovernmental
Panel on Forests by Poffenberger, M., (ed.), Ford
Foundation, DFID, Asia Forest Network and IUCN Gland
(Switzerland), 1999.
This Regional Profile of the Working Group on Community
Involvement in Forest Management sets out an historical
analysis of forest management practices in the region
and provides a wealth of case examples and lessons for
action. Featured countries include Cambodia, Indonesia,
Laos, Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
|
Collaborative
management of protected areas in the Asian region: proceedings
of a workshop in Nepal, May 25-28, 1998 by by Oli,
K. P. (ed.), IUCN Nepal, Kathmandu, 1999
This publication reports on the outcomes of a workshop
to discuss collaborative management in the Asian context,
and to review the related legislative framework, strengths,
weaknesses and institutional capacity. It contains full
background information on the workshop, and outline
of the key conclusions, and recommendations for future
action to carry forward the collaborative management
agenda in the Asian region.
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
|
Communities
and forest management in Canada and the United States:
a report of the IUCN Working Group on Community Involvement
in Forest Management with recommendations to the Intergovernmental
Panel on Forests by Poffenberger, M., (ed.): IUCN
US, Washington, DC 1998.
This Regional Profile of the Working Group on Community
Involvement in Forest Management offers a number of
case studies including of collaborative management between
governmental agencies and local communities in Canada
and the USA.
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
|
Land
Reform and Conservation Areas: towards a Mutually Beneficial
Approach, by Wynberg, R. and T. Kepe, Department
of Environmental Affairs and Tourism, Department of
Land Affairs and IUCN-South Africa, Johannesburg, 1999.
This booklet explores the relationship between land
reforms and conservation policies in South Africa and
the roles and responsibilities of various institutional
actors.
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
|
Partnerships
for Protection: New Strategies for Planning and Management
for Protected Areas by Stolton, S. and N. Dudley,
Earthscan, London 1999.
How can we successfully conserve what remains of the
world's rapidly diminishing natural and semi-natural
areas? Although more and more land and water surface
is under some form of protection, many vital ecosystems
are under-represented, and traditional conservation
methods are often quite ineffective. New approaches
are urgently needed. With contributions from several
CMWG members from many areas of the worls, including
Adrian Phillips, Biksham Gujja, Gonzalo Oviedo, Jessica
Brown and Grazia Borrini-Feyerabend, this book examines
how improvements can be made. It sets out ways to safeguard
all the major ecosystems and explores innovative management
partnerships involving individuals, communities, companies
and governments and draws attention to the importance
of building collaboration among those with a stake in
the resources, and an incentive to protect them. Printed
versions available from http://www.earthscan.co.uk |
|
Guidelines
for marine protected areas by G. Kelleher (ed.),
IUCN, Gland (Switzerland), 1999.
Creation and effective management of marine protected
areas (MPAs) have lagged behind those of protected areas
on land, but they are just as important. The world urgently
needs a comprehensive system of MPAs to conserve biodiversity
and to help rebuild the productivity of the oceans.
The aim of these guidelines is to help countries establish
systems of MPAs as a key component of integrated, collaborative
management of coastal and marine areas and as part of
their sustainable development. The various actions to
make an effective MPA are set out, from early planning
stages to implementation. These guidelines aim to help
policy-makers, planners and field managers, whether
working on conservation of nature or sustainable use
of marine resources.
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
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Partnership
for conservation : report of the regional workshop on
marine protected areas, tourism and communities,
by Salm, R. V. and Y. Tessema (eds.), IUCN EARO, Nairobi,
1998.
The book collects the proceedings of an international
meeting that took place in Kenya. It discusses several
case studies of marine protected areas with reference
to collaborative management and social participation
issues.
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
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Communities
and Conservation - Natural Resource Management in South
and Central Asia by Kothari, A., R.V., Anuradha,
N., Pathak and B. Taneja, B. Sage Publications, New
Delhi, 1998.
This volume is a compilation of papers presented at
a regional workshop in Delhi sponsored by UNESCO in
1997. Specific issues are discussed and numerous case
studies of community involvement in conservation are
illustrated from India, Nepal and Sri Lanka.
Printed versions available from http://kalpavriksh0.tripod.com |
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From
conflict to collaboration: people and forests of Mount
Elgon, Uganda by Scott, P., IUCN, Gland (Switzerland),
1998.
This report describes a field-level assessment of how
people living near the Mount Elgon National Park, in
Uganda, use the park's forest resources. It argues that
extractive use of a range of timber and non-timber forest
products, if properly monitored and controlled, is not
necessarily a threat to biodiversity. The book explains
which data gathering methods were chosen and why, and
how the results of this assessment can be used to develop
collaborative management agreements with local people.
Interdisciplinary and practically oriented, this book
is a must reading for protected area managers and others
who aim to involve rural people in forests and nature
conservation
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
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Indigenous
Peoples and Biodiversity Conservation in Latin America,
IWGIA, Copenhagen, 1998.
The book is the result of a conference held in Pucallpa,
Peru, where representatives from indigenous organizations,
environmentalists and independent experts met to discuss
different methods for managing the protected areas in
Latin America. This is a particularly important issue
for the region given that 80% of Latin America's protected
areas are inhabited by indigenous peoples. The meeting
discussed cases from Peru, Bolivia, Paraguay, Colombia,
Brazil, Venezuela, Panama, Honduras and Costa Rica.
Printed versions available in Spanish and English from
www.IWGIA.org |
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Social
Change and Conservation, edited by Krishna B Ghimire
and Michel P Pimbert, Earthscan and UNRISD, London,
1997.
Protected areas and conservation policies are usually
established with only local nature and wildlife in mind.
Yet they can have far-reaching consequences for local
populations - often harmful ones, undermining their
access to resources and their livelihoods. This is the
first fully comprehensive discussion of the social consequences
of protected area schemes and conservation policies.
Drawing on case studies from North America, Europe,
Asia, Central America and Africa, it critically reviews
current trends in protected area management and the
prevailing concept of conservation, and shows how local
people have been affected - their customary rights,
livelihoods, well-being and social cohesion. Lack of
local participation, of respect for local rights, and
too much emphasis on market forces, has usually meant
the failure to provide for human concerns and wellbeing.
The leading authorities in this book - including Marcus
Colchester, Piers Blaikie, Michel Pimbert and Jules
Pretty - argue for a thorough overhaul of current conservation
thinking and practice. Available from http://www.earthscan.co.uk |
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Building
Bridges for Conservation by Kothari, A., F., Vania,
P., Das, K., Christopher and S. Jha, Indian Institute
of Public Administration, New Delhi. 1997.
A thorough analysis of the potential for joint management
of protected areas in India on the basis of several
case studies and examples.
Printed versions available from http://kalpavriksh0.tripod.com |
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Our
People, Our Resources: Supporting Local Communities
in Participatory Action research on Population Dynamics
and the Local Environment by Barton, T., G. Borrini-Feyerabend,
A. De Sherbinin and P. Warren, IUCN, Gland (Switzerland),
1997. (published also in French and Spanish) http://www.iucn.org/themes/spg/opor/opor.html
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html.
This handbook illustrates concepts, methods and tools
for "primary environmental care", an approach
that seeks to empower communities to meet basic needs
while protecting the environment. In particular, it
focuses on how population size, structure, growth (or
decline) and movements relate to the quality of the
environment and the quality of life. Emphasis is placed
on a community-led process of participatory action research
in which local knowledge and skills are fully utilized.
A main purpose is to promote the effective, integrated
management of environment and population dynamics for
the benefit of local people. As a collection of tools
for action, it is designed for professionals in conservation
and natural resource management, development, population
and public health who wish to promote and assist participatory
action research in rural communities. |
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Collaborative
management of protected areas : tailoring the approach
to the context by Borrini-Feyerabend, G., IUCN,
Gland (Switzerland), 1996
"Collaborative management of protected areas"
is a partnership by which various stakeholders agree
on sharing among themselves the management functions,
rights and responsibilities for a territory or a particular
governmental agency staff - interested in pursuing the
collaborative management option. It offers a broad definition
of the approach and provides a number of examples of
how it has been specifically tailored to different contexts.
General assumptions, consequences, benefits, costs and
potential draw-backs of collaborative management are
reviewed and a process by which an agency in charge
of a protected areas can pursue the approach is illustrated.
http://www.iucn.org/themes/spg/Tailor/index.html
Printed versions available in English, French, Spanish
and Portuguese from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
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Managing
conflicts in protected areas, by Lewis, C., IUCN,
Gland (Switzerland), IUCN, Gland (Switzerland), 1996.
This handbook was written for staff working in protected
areas around the world (including parks, wilderness
areas, research areas and protected landscapes) who
encounter social conflicts in their management practices.
The handbook can also be a resource for other interested
parties who want to play a constructive role in protected
area conflicts. A simple framework is offered and some
strategies for responding to different types of conflicts
in protected areas are explored. Case studies, which
are the heart of the handbook, describe a variety of
both short and long term approaches for dealing with
conflict.
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
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Parks,
People and Professionals. Putting "Participation"
into Protected Area Management, by Michel Pimbert
and Jules Pretty, UNRISD Discussion Paper No 57, Geneva,
1995.
ISSN: 1012-6511
The dominant ideology underpinning conservation has
been that people are bad for natural resources. Policies
and practice have, therefore, sought to exclude people
and so discourage all forms of local participation.
This style of conservation has neglected local people,
their indigenous knowledge and management systems, their
institutions and social organisation, and the value
to them of wild resources. The cost to conservation
has been high. Social conflicts have grown in and around
protected areas, and conservation goals themselves have
been threatened. Conservation itself needs rethinking.
It has been dominated by the positivist and rationalist
paradigm, in which professionals assume they know best
and so can analyse and influence natural resources in
the ways they desire. Professionals tend to be reductionist
in their approach, taking only the presence of a particular
species or total species diversity as indicators of
value. Such preservationist ideology is dominated by
the desire to exclude local people. Yet, there is growing
empirical evidence to show that local people have long
influenced natural systems in ways that improve biodiversity.
Many apparently `primary' forests or habitats did in
fact support large numbers of people in the past, whose
management actions significantly influenced what remains
today. What is needed is a rethinking of conservation
science itself. The central challenge is to find ways
of putting people back into conservation. Such participation
will not be easy, as the term itself is interpreted
in many different ways. Only certain types of participation
will lead to sustainable conservation. Alternative systems
of learning and interaction will help this process of
participation, and lead to a new vision for protected
area management that builds strongly on vernacular conservation.The
new vision will need a new professionalism, new supportive
policies, and innovative inter-institutional arrangements.
Available from: http://www.unrisd.org |
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National
parks without people? : the South American experience,
by Amend, S. and T. Amend, eds., IUCN, Gland (Switzerland),
1995.
The relationship between protected natural areas and
local human populations is extremely complex. This challenging
book with diverse contributions from experts covering
13 countries, places the issues in context. The book
clearly demonstrates that people are part of most national
parks, and policies that ignore their presence are doomed
to failure. Each country section opens with an introduction
to the protected area system and nature protection policy,
followed by an analysis of the legal aspects of human
occupation, and concludes with descriptions of management
experiences.
Printed versions available in English and Spanish from:
http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
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Collaborative
management of forests for conservation and development
by Fisher, R.J., IUCN and WWF Gland (Switzerland), 1995
This booklet explores various CM approaches including
some that are forest-related such as community forestry
and joint forest management, and others that are concerned
with protected areas. It covers issues of theory, implementation
and methodologies for implementation.
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
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Expanding
partnerships in conservation by McNeely, J. A.,
(ed.), Island Press, Washington, DC, 1995.
Protected areas around the globe - national parks, wildlife
reserves, biosphere reserves - will prosper only if
they are supported by the public, the private sector,
and the full range of government agencies. Yet such
support is unlikely unless society appreciates the importance
of protected areas to its own interests, and protected
areas are well managed and contribute to the national
welfare in a cost-effective way. A crucial foundation
for success is full cooperation between individuals
and institutions. Based on papers presented at the IV
World Congress on National Parks and Protected Areas,
this book explores how new and stronger partnerships
can be formed between managers of protected areas and
other sectors of society. It describes a range of activities
currently under-way in many parts of the world that
are intended to improve conservation efforts at the
international, national, and local levels.
Printed versions available from http://www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.html |
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