Wednesday
10, September
2003 Highlights
Other
Daily Reports:
Monday
08 Sep. 2003 // Tuesday
09 Sep. 2003 // Wednesday
10 Sep. 2003 //
Thursday 11 Sep. 2003 // Friday
12 Sep. 2003 // Saturday
13 Sep. 2003 //
Tuesday 16 Sep. 2003 // Wednesday
17 Sep. 2003 /
Final Summary

Wednesday
10 September
2003 : Symposium C: Community &
Parks //
Symposium D: Working at Scale // Plenary
2: Briefing on the Workshops
IISD
Report // PDF
Version // Programme
of the Day // Today's
Photogallery
Participants
of the Vth IUCN World Parks Congress (WPC) met in two morning
symposia to address "Community
and Parks" and "Working at Scale." Plenary met
in the afternoon to hear a briefing on the upcoming workshop
streams and cross-cutting themes. Numerous side meetings and
special events on, inter alia, transboundary protected areas
(PAs) and biodiversity and mining were held throughout the
day.
back
to top
SYMPOSIUM
C: COMMUNITY AND PARKS

Yolanda
Kakabadse, IUCN President, chaired the session. Bob
Debus, Attorney General and Minister for the Environment of
New South Wales (NSW), Australia, highlighted the benefits
of stakeholder involvement in PA management and biodiversity
conservation strategies in NSW, including: reduced conflicts;
increased public support; employment generation; and reconciliation
with aboriginal peoples. He called for equitable benefit sharing
for local communities, and cautioned against inflexible prescriptions,
a sole focus on physical aspects, and decision making without
community support.

Otimio
Castillo,
on behalf of Sebastião Manchinery, General Coordinator of the Coordination of Indigenous Organizations
of the Amazon Basin, outlined the conflicts created by the
occupation and exploitation of the Amazon. He called for: governmental
recognition of indigenous rights; co-management and participation;
implementation of action plans and relevant international environmental
instruments; and a ban on disruptive extractive activities.
Francesco
Bandarin, UNESCO, presented on the World Heritage
Convention and the Man and Biosphere Programme. Noting that
biosphere reserves have become places for people and nature
since the Caracas Congress, Walter Erdelen, UNESCO, said that
they: mobilize communities; provide neutral ground for cooperation
within and between countries; and promote research into biodiversity.
He called for education on sustainable development, increased
financial support, and capacity building.
Ashish
Kothari, Kalpavriksh, presented the community conserved areas (CCAs)
concept, noting that CCAs: originate from traditional
common property management; cover a wide range of ecosystems,
sacred and cultural areas outside officially designated PAs;
and provide livelihood, economic opportunities, and ecological
functions. He called for: further financial, human and technological
support; the recognition of community rights; and international
acknowledgement of CCAs’ benefits.
Co-chair Claudio
Maretti called for the integration of indigenous
conservation practices and community management structures
into official systems.
Stressing indigenous
peoples’ rights to self-determination
and land, and the problem of forced expulsion, Luz
Maria de la Torre, indigenous representative, presented the Indigenous
Peoples’ Declaration to the WPC. The Declaration calls
for: a rights-based approach to sustainable development and
nature conservation; indigenous peoples’ free, prior
informed consent as a prerequisite to establishing PAs; and
full indigenous participation in PA management.
During a panel discussion
on parks with or without people, Jannie Lasimbang, indigenous
representative, outlined the negative
effects of depriving indigenous peoples of their lands for
conservation, including loss of rights and livelihoods, and
conflict with park authorities. She stressed the economic advantages
of entrusting PA monitoring and enforcement to indigenous communities.
Grazia Borrini-Feyerabend, IUCN Commission on Environmental,
Economic and Social Policy (CEESP), noted: the historical interaction
between people and nature; that a dominant and culturally biased
perception of nature should not damage other cultures; and
that many PAs exist only because they are inhabited or used.
Gustavo Suarez de Freitas, Director of Peru’s National
System of PAs, stressed that certain PAs require restricted
use and that benefit sharing is needed to build alliances with
local communities. He suggested: acknowledging the constraints
posed by PAs to indigenous communities; making good use of
the IUCN PA categorization; focusing on conservation priorities;
and reaching agreements with local communities with right to
the lands.
Stressing that national economic and security interests should
not be undermined by traditional claims of minority groups,
Richard Leakey, Eden Wildlife Trust, opposed politicizing conservation
through the indigenous issue. Kai Schmidt-Soltau, German Society
for Technical Cooperation (GTZ), emphasized the social costs
of conservation and called for either improving the resettlement
of people excluded from PAs, or ruling out resettlement as
a conservation strategy.
Rejoice
Mabudafhasi, South African Deputy Minister of Environmental
Affairs and Tourism, introduced a video showing the benefits
to PA management of a gender-equitable perspective. Achim Steiner,
IUCN Director General, introduced a theatre performance on
PA issues.
back
to top
SYMPOSIUM
D: WORKING AT SCALE
Gwen
Mahlangu, Chair of the South African Parliamentary Portfolio
Committee on Environment and Tourism, and Trevor Sandwith,
Cape Action for People and the Environment, co-chaired the
session. HE John Briceno, Deputy Prime Minister of Belize,
introduced the Mesoamerican Biological Corridor initiative,
a regional effort promoting conservation, sustainable development
and poverty alleviation, and called for greater community participation
and standardized conservation methodologies.
Advocating the concept of a seamless park network, Fran
Mainella,
US National Park Service Director, called for conservation
beyond PA boundaries, an emphasis on ecosystem integrity, and
international partnerships. She stressed the importance of
widespread environmental ethics combined with local commitment.
Mohammed
Valli Moosa, South African Minister of Environmental
Affairs and Tourism, described the establishment of a transfrontier
PA between South Africa and Mozambique. He noted that problems
arose due to: the presence of military and agricultural fences
obstructing animal movements; abandoned mines; illegal immigration;
and sovereignty issues. He said that strong political commitment
on both sides helped overcome these challenges.
Gustavo
Fonseca, Conservation International, emphasized the
role of corridors in reducing the vulnerability of isolated
PAs. He identified infrastructure development as a cause of
biodiversity loss and stressed the need to conduct threat analysis,
to address stress, and to generate incentives for conservation
at the appropriate scales. He emphasized the need to achieve
conservation objectives within boundaries in order for benefits
to accrue beyond boundaries.
Mike
Fay, US Wildlife Conservation Society, outlined data
collection efforts in Central Africa and introduced the Congo
Basin Forest Partnership. He said challenges include building
infrastructure and human capacity, and increasing public awareness.
Identifying oceans as primary life support systems, Sylvia
Earle, Executive Director of Conservation International, called
for the establishment of marine PAs (MPAs) and for an increased
understanding of marine ecosystems and relevant conservation
mechanisms.
During a panel discussion
on corridor initiatives moderated by Steven Sanderson, Wildlife
Conservation Society, Hemanta
Mishra, Sian Development Bank, stressed that developing transnational
corridors is not only a conservation issue but also involves
political, social and economic concerns. Noting problems arising
from the paucity of scientific information, violent conflict
and border issues, he identified the need for political will
to promote transboundary conservation. Hartmut Vogtmann, President
of the German Federal Agency for Nature Conservation, presented
a project on the establishment of a European green belt. Highlighting
Europe’s strong commitment to PAs, Nick Hanley, European
Commission, presented Natura 2000, the main EU programme for
PAs. Juan Carlos Godoy, World Commission on Protected Areas
(WCPA), advocated the establishment of PA networks at different
scales, and stressed the need to: identify factors crucial
to connecting PAs; involve local communities; standardize PA
management internationally; and develop national mechanisms
to encourage best practices.
Jeffrey
McNeely, IUCN Chief Scientist, stressed the need to increase PAs’ ecological
viability by increasing their size or connecting them, and
called for: political unity; local
support for conservation; and international partnerships.
back
to top
PLENARY
2: BRIEFING ON THE WORKSHOPS
Chair David
Sheppard, IUCN, encouraged participants to comment
on the drafts of the Durban Accord and Action Plan and WPC
recommendations.
Steve
Edwards, IUCN, emphasized the need to avoid contradictory
statements in: the WPC recommendations, the Durban Accord and
Action Plan, and the message to the Conference of the Parties
to the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD).
Julia
Carabias,
Mexico’s former Minister of Environment,
presented the goals of the stream on developing capacities
for PA management. She urged participants to recommend strategies,
methodologies, and tools to strengthen capacity.
Mohamed
Bakarr, WCPA, outlined the aims and organisation of
the stream on building comprehensive PA systems. He said the
workshop should identify ways to: achieve a representative
PA system; set targets; achieve comprehensive coverage at global,
regional and national levels; and generate funding. He said
expected outputs include a world database on PAs, the updated
UN List of PAs, the Global Gap Analysis report, and contributions
to the Durban Accord and the message to the CBD.
Carlos
Quintela, Wildlife Conservation Society, introduced
the stream on building a secure financial future. He said sustainable
financing for PAs requires raising funding baselines and reducing
oscillations in funding. He suggested focusing discussions
on how to generate and distribute funding for PAs. Quintela
said the stream aims at: promoting the adoption of modern business
and financial models for PAs; understanding policy and institutional
constraints; demonstrating sustainable financial tools; building
capacity; and establishing strategic alliances.
Peter
Bridgewater, Ramsar Convention Secretary General, introduced
the stream on linkages in the landscape and seascape. He stressed
the importance of management beyond PA boundaries, and noted
the interlinkages between terrestrial and marine PAs. He suggested
considering the negative consequences of building corridors,
and highlighted that biodiversity conservation should address
the genetic, species, community and landscape and seascape
levels.
Jeffrey
McNeely introduced the stream on building broader
support for PAs. He elaborated on the seven workshop themes,
highlighting, inter alia: non-material values of PAs; PAs and
local and indigenous communities; supporting PAs during violent
conflict; urban outreach strategies; building international,
national and local political support for PAs; and the potential
impact of communication.
Jim
Johnston, Parks Canada, and Grazia Borrini-Feyerabend,
CEESP, presented the stream on PA governance. Stressing that
governance is the most important factor for poverty eradication
and is essential for sustainable development, they said that
the workshop would deal with questions of equity, decision
making, and accountability.

On the stream on evaluating management effectiveness, Marc
Hockings, WCPA, noted that issues to be addressed include ways
to measure: the state of PAs and ecosystems; progress achieved;
the impact of PAs on communities; reaction to threats; and
the adequacy of funding. Noting that evaluation systems have
been in place since the Caracas Congress, he stressed that
it is time to assess their effectiveness.
Ashish
Kothari presented
the goals of the cross-cutting theme on communities and equity.
He emphasized the need to fully
recognize indigenous peoples’ rights in the development
of conservation strategies and outlined how the theme will
be integrated into each workshop stream. Kothari asked workshop
coordinators to give consideration to the diversity of peoples
and languages, and to different conservation models.
Charles
Ehler, US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
introduced the MPAs cross-cutting theme by recalling relevant
WSSD commitments, including the establishment of a representative
MPA network by 2012. He outlined linkages with workshop streams
related to: enhancing living marine resources and maintaining
ecosystem functions; making MPA networks more resilient; enhancing
the effectiveness of MPA management; integrating MPA management
into marine and coastal governance; and conserving marine biodiversity
in areas beyond national jurisdiction.
Natajaran
Ishwaran, UNESCO World Heritage Centre, outlined
how world heritage will be integrated into workshop streams.
He expressed hope that the WPC would build broad systems to
support world heritage, which will assist in effective PA management.
Noting that site managers often do not recognize the benefits
of world heritage, he recommended linking training with global
PA management capacity building, strengthening existing partnerships
and building new ones.
Kenton
Miller, WCPA Chair, offered IUCN plaques to Enrique
Beltran (post humus to his son), Bing Lucas (post humus to
Hugh Logan) and Gerardo Budowski, in recognition of their long-term
commitment to PAs.

back
to top
Day
by Day 8-17 September 2003
|
|
|
Post
WPC News & Events from September 2003 to Date /
September 2003 / August
2003 / July 2003 / June
2003 /
May 2003 / April
2003 / March
2003 / Jan-Feb
2003 / 2002
