Effort de conservation et Aires marines protégées : quatre illusions et un changement de perspective

In political and sometimes scientific arguments, the effort made for the conservation of marine biodiversity via Marine Protected Areas (MPA) is evaluated on the basis of classified areas, which implies that their status offers protection on the scale of their perimeter. More generally, MPAs are bas...

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Main Authors: Jean-Eudes Beuret, Anne Cadoret
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Éditions en environnement VertigO 2021-05-01
Series:VertigO
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/30538
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spelling doaj-8e2d00462e5b45099aa0d41d146268202021-09-02T18:57:46ZfraÉditions en environnement VertigOVertigO1492-84422021-05-0121110.4000/vertigo.30538Effort de conservation et Aires marines protégées : quatre illusions et un changement de perspectiveJean-Eudes BeuretAnne CadoretIn political and sometimes scientific arguments, the effort made for the conservation of marine biodiversity via Marine Protected Areas (MPA) is evaluated on the basis of classified areas, which implies that their status offers protection on the scale of their perimeter. More generally, MPAs are based on four pillars: a status, a perimeter, rules and a manager. An interdisciplinary international comparative analysis (geography and economy), based on 13 cases studied in highly differentiated geographical and societal contexts, leads us to return to four founding illusions according to which: a) the status marks the institutionalization of the MPA and offers protection; b) the perimeter of the MPA corresponds to the managed and protected surface; c) specific rules are necessary for conservation action and are designed to be enforced through sanctions; and d) the implementation of the territorial conservation policy implies a centrality, with a manager with or without authority. To these four illusions, described respectively as statutory, surface, normative and centralizing, correspond more complex realities illustrated by the case studies. Their analysis leads us to specify what MPAs are, to draw lessons from them for accompanying the processes of institutionalization of MPAs, and to offer new modalities and indicators for evaluating the effort made in favor of conservation.http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/30538marine protected areasinstitutional bricolageconservationpaper parkpolitical ecology
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jean-Eudes Beuret
Anne Cadoret
spellingShingle Jean-Eudes Beuret
Anne Cadoret
Effort de conservation et Aires marines protégées : quatre illusions et un changement de perspective
VertigO
marine protected areas
institutional bricolage
conservation
paper park
political ecology
author_facet Jean-Eudes Beuret
Anne Cadoret
author_sort Jean-Eudes Beuret
title Effort de conservation et Aires marines protégées : quatre illusions et un changement de perspective
title_short Effort de conservation et Aires marines protégées : quatre illusions et un changement de perspective
title_full Effort de conservation et Aires marines protégées : quatre illusions et un changement de perspective
title_fullStr Effort de conservation et Aires marines protégées : quatre illusions et un changement de perspective
title_full_unstemmed Effort de conservation et Aires marines protégées : quatre illusions et un changement de perspective
title_sort effort de conservation et aires marines protégées : quatre illusions et un changement de perspective
publisher Éditions en environnement VertigO
series VertigO
issn 1492-8442
publishDate 2021-05-01
description In political and sometimes scientific arguments, the effort made for the conservation of marine biodiversity via Marine Protected Areas (MPA) is evaluated on the basis of classified areas, which implies that their status offers protection on the scale of their perimeter. More generally, MPAs are based on four pillars: a status, a perimeter, rules and a manager. An interdisciplinary international comparative analysis (geography and economy), based on 13 cases studied in highly differentiated geographical and societal contexts, leads us to return to four founding illusions according to which: a) the status marks the institutionalization of the MPA and offers protection; b) the perimeter of the MPA corresponds to the managed and protected surface; c) specific rules are necessary for conservation action and are designed to be enforced through sanctions; and d) the implementation of the territorial conservation policy implies a centrality, with a manager with or without authority. To these four illusions, described respectively as statutory, surface, normative and centralizing, correspond more complex realities illustrated by the case studies. Their analysis leads us to specify what MPAs are, to draw lessons from them for accompanying the processes of institutionalization of MPAs, and to offer new modalities and indicators for evaluating the effort made in favor of conservation.
topic marine protected areas
institutional bricolage
conservation
paper park
political ecology
url http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/30538
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AT annecadoret effortdeconservationetairesmarinesprotegeesquatreillusionsetunchangementdeperspective
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