Saturday
13, 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

Saturday
13 September
2003 :
Joint Session on Governance, Linkages
and Building Support //
Developing
the Capacity to Manage PAs // Linkages
in the Landscape/Seascape //
Building Comprehensive PAs
System // Plenary: Information Session on the Durban
Accord //
IISD
Report // PDF
Version // Programme
of the Day // Today's
Photogallery
Participants at the Vth IUCN World Parks Congress
(WPC) met in workshop streams to address: linkages in the landscape
and seascape; building broader support for protected areas
(PAs); PA governance; developing the capacity to manage PAs;
evaluating management effectiveness; building a secure financial
future; and building comprehensive PA systems. Workshop streams
met in break-out and plenary sessions to address their respective
issues, synthesize outcomes, and approve WPC recommendations.
Side meetings, special events and discussion groups on the
WPC recommendations were held throughout the day. A special
information session on the Durban Accord and the Message to
the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) was held in the
evening.
This report focuses on a joint session of the streams on governance,
linkages in the landscape and seascape, and building support,
and on plenary sessions on: developing the capacity to manage
PAs; linkages in the landscape and seascape; and building comprehensive
PA systems. It also addresses the session on the Durban Accord
and the Message to the CBD.
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JOINT SESSION ON GOVERNANCE, LINKAGES AND BUILDING SUPPORT
COMMUNITY
EMPOWERMENT FOR CONSERVATION: Key conditions for
effective community conservation: Taghi Farvar, Center for
Sustainable Development, and Fergus McKay, Forest People Programme
- UK, co-chaired the session. Maria Fernanda Espinosa, IUCN,
outlined the relation between decentralization and the recognition
of indigenous territories in Latin America, stressing the need
to institutionalize direct indigenous participation, and address
operational difficulties.
Kai
Schmidt-Soltau, German Society for Technical Cooperation
(GTZ), addressed forced resettlements for conservation in Central
Africa. Noting the risks associated with uncompensated forced
displacements for PA creation, including landlessness, food
insecurity, impoverishment, and impacts on biodiversity, he
called for either improving or phasing out forced resettlement
practices.
Discussing key governance powers, Marshall
Murphree, University
of Zimbabwe, stressed that centralized and devolved management
are not mutually exclusive if ecological requirements and legitimacy
are respected.
Calling
for moral justice, Dan Brockington, Oxford University, UK,
said that, because of communities’ oppression, "unfair
PAs" will remain.
Juan
Mayr, former Colombian Environment Minister, presented
on the linkages between conservation, cultural identity and
human rights, and called for an integrated, ethically responsible
management approach.
During
a panel discussion, McKay stressed the need to bridge the
gap between human rights and environmental fora. Farvar
said people’s oppression and nature conservation can
co-exist, noting that colonial practices still influence conservation
models.
Stressing the need for accountability, Madhu
Sarin, Society
for Promotion of Wasteland Development, said the majority of
people displaced in India belonged to the most marginalized,
but culturally richest, groups. Ken MacDonald, University of
Toronto, Canada, noted that devolution will not help unless
inequality is addressed at the local level, and stressed the
need for institutional reflexivity.
Participants addressed, inter alia, poverty eradication as
a prere-quisite for conservation.
Synthesis
session: Mayr and Michel
Pimbert, International
Institute for Environment and Development, co-chaired the session.
A representative from the group on poverty and PAs stressed
the need for: tenure as the foundation for integrating conservation
and development; incentives for stewardship, including empowerment
through community participation and rights; and government
accountability.
A representative outlined recommendations from the group on
co-managed PAs, including: linking responsibility and authority;
ensuring legitimate representation; establishing appropriate
legal frameworks; and integrating social, environmental, economic
and cultural aspects.
Summarizing the outcome of the group on mobile peoples and
conservation, a representative concluded that nomadic pastoralism
is a form of cultural identity, can enhance conservation, and
needs legislative recognition and support.
A representative from the group on community conserved areas
(CCAs) said benefits from CCAs include: biodiversity conservation;
restoration of degraded lands; economic benefits; and regaining
pride and identity.
In
a panel discussion, Janis Alcorn, World Resources Institute,
welcomed the sense of global solidarity among communities.
Patrick McConney, Caribbean Conservation Association, noted
that internationally used terms may not have credibility at
the community level. Pimbert stressed the need for organizational
transformation and for a rights-based approach in the recommendations.
Participants agreed to include in the Congress Proceedings
HIV effects on communities’ capacity as an emerging issue,
and to call for the protection of cultural diversity.
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DEVELOPING THE CAPACITY TO MANAGE PROTECTED AREAS
SYNTHESIS
SESSION: Kishore Rao, IUCN, introduced the session. Regarding
capacity for site planning, a group’s representative
emphasized the need for adaptive management to enable practitioners
to respond to contextual factors, and foster ground level initiative.
The group on policy and legal instruments recommended public
access to information and standardized national procedures
to enable participation. Its representative said PA staff should
develop conflict-solving capacities, and adopt an intercultural
view.
On institutional options for systems level planning, a representative
noted an excessive centralization in PA management and planning,
and that PA concerns must be incorporated into regional land-use
planning.

On human resources, the group called for adequate long-term
staffing, allocating PA revenues to capacity development, and
the adoption of global competency standards for PA staff.
The group on developing capacity through networks called for:
strengthening existing networks; establishing sub-regional
communication channels; and improving access to information
for PA managers.
In
a panel discussion chaired by Julia Carabias, former Mexican
Environment Minister, Jim Taylor, Wildlife Environment Society
of South Africa, stressed the need to build on community knowledge,
avoid the alienation of communities through militant approaches,
and respond to development needs. Carlos Castaño, Parks
Foundation of Latin America and the Caribbean, highlighted
the requirement for a strategy to enhance capacity building
among communities, managers and policy makers. He noted that
PA managers must be socially sensitive administrators, and
show political leadership in involving society. Angelita
Meniado,
Philippine Department of Environment and Natural Resources,
noted the need to develop teaching and learning materials and
diffuse techniques for PA management.
John
Hough, UNDP, said capacity development is about achieving
more results with fewer resources. Effendy Sumardja, Indonesian
State Ministry of the Environment, called for balancing conservation
goals, and involving all stakeholders in management. Daan
Vreugdenhil,
World Institute for Conservation and Environment, said senior
staff should be financially rewarded to ensure their long-term
commitment, and training should address ranger illiteracy.
Carabias
noted that capacity building not only involves training but
also legal frameworks, policies, and participation mechanisms,
and called for developing a capacity-building strategic plan.
David Gutiérrez, National Commission of Natural PAs
in Mexico, presented recommendations for the CBD COP-7.
David
Sheppard, WPC Secretary General, and Sejal
Worah, WWF,
introduced recommendations for strengthening institutional
and societal, and individual and group capacities.
In
a panel discussion, Katrina Brandon, Conservation International
(CI), stressed the need to demonstrate the effectiveness of
training in terms of conservation outputs to donors. Konrad
Ritter, The Nature Conservancy, recommended directing resources
into a global strategy for capacity building. Stephan
Amend,
GTZ, said proposals for PA capacity building should be made
more attractive to donors by including poverty reduction strategies. Alfredo
Guillet, Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, called
for better use of existing resources for capacity building,
rather than requesting additional resources. Natarajan
Ishwaran,
UNESCO, recommended forging links between capacity building
for PA management and for other related fields. Mario
Ramos, Global Environment Facility, underscored the need to: sustain
capacity after initial training; integrate national policies
for environmental management; encourage South-South interaction;
and enhance local communities’ capacity to participate.
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LINKAGES IN THE LANDSCAPE AND SEASCAPE
SYNTHESIS
SESSION: Participants heard reports from the stream’s
break-out groups. On IUCN Categories V and VI and World Heritage
Cultural Landscape, a group’s representative recommended
the protected landscape/seascape approach as a framework for
sustainable development.
Regarding adaptive response to climate change, a representative
called for: adaptive management for conservation strategies;
management at the landscape, seascape and river basin levels;
and a focus on the delivery of ecosystem goods and services.
On
linkages design and restoration, a representative stressed
that many PAs exist as fragments in degraded landscapes, which
affects PAs’ ecological integrity and the sustainability
of livelihoods.
Regarding planning linkages in the landscape, identified gaps
included: linkages between freshwater ecosystems and seascapes;
institutional linkages; maintaining the ecological functions
of corridors; and addressing invasive alien species.
On freshwater, a representative noted that freshwater systems
stand at the nexus of multiple interests and stakeholders,
and are under-represented in the global PA network.
Regarding implementing marine PA networks, a representative
suggested focusing on establishing a global system of marine
and coastal PA networks by 2012.
On the international game board, a representative stressed:
PA integration into the land- and seascape; the revitalization
of rural communities; and the development of informal links
between conventions.
Pertaining to the co-existence between humans and wildlife,
it was suggested to address all aspects of human-wildlife conflicts,
and to establish an international network on the issue.
On
the communities’ role in sustaining linkages in the
landscape, a representative stressed the role of nomadic and
pastoralist peoples.
Regarding integrating biodiversity conservation and mining
into land-use planning and management strategies, a representative
stressed the low level of trust between constituencies.
Participants stressed ecological restoration as an emerging
issue for inclusion in the Congress Proceedings. They reviewed
recommendations on: integrated landscape management to support
PAs; policy linkages between PAs and relevant international
conventions and programmes; transboundary PA initiatives; preventing
and mitigating human-wildlife conflicts; biodiversity and mining;
and PAs, freshwater and integrated river basin management.
Participants then debated the recommendation on biodiversity
and mining, which recognizes the division between elements
of both the conservation and mining communities that are in
favor of, and those that are against, a dialogue between them.
Text recommending that the IUCN Council keep the issue under
review was bracketed and will be referred to the Recommendations
Committee.
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BUILDING COMPREHENSIVE PROTECTED AREA SYSTEMS
SYNTHESIS
SESSION: Gustavo Fonseca, CI, chaired the session.
Roger Sayre, The Nature Conservancy, stressed the importance
of large-scale planning, and described a resource guide that
seeks to facilitate inter-institutional collaboration and enhance
global priority setting.
Thomas
Brooks, CI, presented on global targets and regional
priorities, and elaborated on: global habitat assessment; identification
of key biodiversity areas; and global PA gap analyses.
Noting the link between climate change and habitat fragmentation,
Lee Hannah, Center for Applied Biodiversity Science, and Miguel
Araujo, Evora University, Portugal, introduced recommendations
from the group on area selection and PA design, including the
need for: expanded PA networks; ecological corridors; land
management beyond boundaries; strengthened NGO scientific capacity;
focused monitoring programmes; and reduction in carbon-intensive
energy production and consumption.
Participants considered, inter alia, methods to communicate
key findings, and cooperation between research and implementing
institutions.
Addressing the costs of comprehensive PA systems, Aaron
Bruner,
CI, noted a major shortfall in funding, notably in developing
countries, and recommended: clearly communicating PA benefits;
increasing financial data availability; and developing budget
monitoring guidelines.
Tom
Lacher, CI, spoke on monitoring biodiversity in the global
system through the TEAM model, a framework for site-specific
monitoring and data management.
Participants addressed the creation of legal mechanisms for
North-South transfer of funds for biodiversity, and the complementarity
between site-specific and global monitoring.
Bob
Pressey, New South Wales National Parks Service, Australia,
presented the stream’s conclusions, including: completing
PA networks; considering biophysical change, including climate,
when establishing a comprehensive global network; being strategic
when selecting PAs; and designating and managing PAs in a regional
networks context.
Participants then discussed the WPC recommendations on building
a comprehensive and effective PA system, and on global change
and PAs.
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PLENARY: INFORMATION SESSION ON THE DURBAN ACCORD
Mayr chaired an evening plenary session, which reviewed the
drafts of the Durban Accord, Action Plan and Message to CBD
COP-7.
Roger
Crofts, Chair of the Durban Accord working group, noted
that the Durban Action Plan will be a powerful political statement,
and stressed the need for priorities, partnerships, and implementation. Peter
Schei, Chair of the Message to the CBD working group,
outlined key aspects of the introduction of the Message, and
noted that targets, timelines and demanding language had been
incorporated into the recommendation to address several challenges,
including benefit sharing and technology transfer. John
Scanlon,
IUCN, presented the links between key WPC outputs.

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