4.3 Article

Allies, not aliens: increasing the role of local communities in marine protected area implementation

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION
卷 37, 期 1, 页码 23-34

出版社

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0376892910000172

关键词

adaptive management; community-based management; customary management; emergent rules; flexible zoning; learning platforms; livelihoods; local knowledge; marine protected areas; temporal closure

资金

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [03F0474A]
  2. Indonesian Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries (DKP)
  3. Ministry for Research and Technology (RISTEK)

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Various management approaches have been proposed to address the alarming depletion of marine coastal resources. Prominent among them are community-based management and the establishment of marine protected areas (MPAs). The overall poor performance of MPAs can be traced to a failure to effectively include local communities in the design and implementation of relevant measures. Recent efforts have incorporated aspects of community-based management into a hybrid form of management, which ideally builds upon existing local management practices. A key challenge lies in the development of appropriate frameworks that allow for the successful participation of local communities in management. A review of studies on MPA design and community-based marine resource management and fieldwork observations provides suggestions on how to address current socioeconomic shortcomings in MPA design and implementation, successfully involving local communities in order to provide a better local basis for effective larger MPA networks. A combination of MPA tools as the formal frame and community-based natural resource management as the adaptive core that recognizes local communities as allies, not aliens, is needed to develop successful conservation approaches.

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