A new approach to conservation: using community empowerment for sustainable well-being
The global environmental conservation community recognizes that the participation of local communities is essential for the success of conservation initiatives; however, much work remains to be done on how to integrate conservation and human well-being. We propose that an assets-based approach to en...
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doaj-9f99f736d8d6407db1cd9395dc6e71682020-11-24T22:29:01ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872017-12-01224610.5751/ES-09598-2204069598A new approach to conservation: using community empowerment for sustainable well-beingAlaka Wali0Diana Alvira1Paula S. Tallman2Ashwin Ravikumar3Miguel O. Macedo4Integrated Research Center, The Field Museum of Natural HistoryKeller Science Action Center, The Field Museum of Natural HistoryKeller Science Action Center, The Field Museum of Natural HistoryKeller Science Action Center, The Field Museum of Natural HistoryInstituto del Bien ComúnThe global environmental conservation community recognizes that the participation of local communities is essential for the success of conservation initiatives; however, much work remains to be done on how to integrate conservation and human well-being. We propose that an assets-based approach to environmental conservation and human well-being, which is grounded in a biocultural framework, can support sustainable and adaptive management of natural resources by communities in regions adjacent to protected areas. We present evidence from conservation and quality of life initiatives led by the Field Museum of Natural History over the past 17 years in the Peruvian Amazon. Data were derived from asset mapping in 37 communities where rapid inventories were conducted and from 38 communities that participated in longer term quality of life planning. Our main findings are that Amazonian communities have many characteristics, or assets, that recent scholarship has linked to environmental sustainability and good natural resource stewardship, and that quality of life plans that are based on these assets tend to produce priorities that are more consistent with environmental conservation. Importantly, we found that validating social and ecological assets through our approach can contribute to the creation of protected areas and to their long-term management. As strategies to engage local communities in conservation expand, research on how particular methodologies, such as an assets-based approach, is needed to determine how these initiatives can best empower local communities, how they can be improved, and how they can most effectively be linked to broader conservation and development processes.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol22/iss4/art6/Amazonassetsbioculturalconservationforest dwellersindigenous communitiesPeruprotected areas managementwell-being |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Alaka Wali Diana Alvira Paula S. Tallman Ashwin Ravikumar Miguel O. Macedo |
spellingShingle |
Alaka Wali Diana Alvira Paula S. Tallman Ashwin Ravikumar Miguel O. Macedo A new approach to conservation: using community empowerment for sustainable well-being Ecology and Society Amazon assets biocultural conservation forest dwellers indigenous communities Peru protected areas management well-being |
author_facet |
Alaka Wali Diana Alvira Paula S. Tallman Ashwin Ravikumar Miguel O. Macedo |
author_sort |
Alaka Wali |
title |
A new approach to conservation: using community empowerment for sustainable well-being |
title_short |
A new approach to conservation: using community empowerment for sustainable well-being |
title_full |
A new approach to conservation: using community empowerment for sustainable well-being |
title_fullStr |
A new approach to conservation: using community empowerment for sustainable well-being |
title_full_unstemmed |
A new approach to conservation: using community empowerment for sustainable well-being |
title_sort |
new approach to conservation: using community empowerment for sustainable well-being |
publisher |
Resilience Alliance |
series |
Ecology and Society |
issn |
1708-3087 |
publishDate |
2017-12-01 |
description |
The global environmental conservation community recognizes that the participation of local communities is essential for the success of conservation initiatives; however, much work remains to be done on how to integrate conservation and human well-being. We propose that an assets-based approach to environmental conservation and human well-being, which is grounded in a biocultural framework, can support sustainable and adaptive management of natural resources by communities in regions adjacent to protected areas. We present evidence from conservation and quality of life initiatives led by the Field Museum of Natural History over the past 17 years in the Peruvian Amazon. Data were derived from asset mapping in 37 communities where rapid inventories were conducted and from 38 communities that participated in longer term quality of life planning. Our main findings are that Amazonian communities have many characteristics, or assets, that recent scholarship has linked to environmental sustainability and good natural resource stewardship, and that quality of life plans that are based on these assets tend to produce priorities that are more consistent with environmental conservation. Importantly, we found that validating social and ecological assets through our approach can contribute to the creation of protected areas and to their long-term management. As strategies to engage local communities in conservation expand, research on how particular methodologies, such as an assets-based approach, is needed to determine how these initiatives can best empower local communities, how they can be improved, and how they can most effectively be linked to broader conservation and development processes. |
topic |
Amazon assets biocultural conservation forest dwellers indigenous communities Peru protected areas management well-being |
url |
http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol22/iss4/art6/ |
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