Increasingly, natural resource conservation programs refer to participation and local community involvement as one of the necessary prerequisites for sustainable resource management. In frameworks of adaptive comanagement, the theory of participatory conservation plays a central role in the democratization of decisionmaking authority and equitable distribution of benefits and burdens. We observe, however, that the institutions of state, society, and economy shape the implementation and application of participation in significant ways across contexts. This paper examines the political ecology of participation by comparing and contrasting discourse and practice in four developed and developing contexts. The cases drawn from Central Asia, Afri...
Participatory approaches to conservation have been applied worldwide by governments and non-governme...
Debate about what proportion of the Earth to protect often overshadows the question of how nature sh...
Debate about what proportion of the Earth to protect often overshadows the question of how nature sh...
We draw on the concept of ‘fit’ to understand how co-management and Payments for Ecosystem Services ...
This article explicitly connects a growing body of specific literature, the political ecology of con...
Participatory conservation projects imply direct involvement of local communities in natural conserv...
Who are the beneficiaries from participative approaches in conservation? The authors compare two pro...
The promotion of increased community participation in natural resource management and conservation b...
The literature on protected areas has increasingly focused on the impacts of conservation initiative...
Community-based conservation (CBC) approaches are complex governance spaces where diverse actors ope...
This study examines the possibilities of executing Community-Based Conservation (CBC) as a viable en...
Debate about what proportion of the Earth to protect often overshadows the question of how nature sh...
Co-published with RoutledgeThe links between policy and practice in natural resource management are ...
Debate about what proportion of the Earth to protect often overshadows the question of how nature sh...
Natural resource governance requires the collaboration of various stakeholders, including community,...
Participatory approaches to conservation have been applied worldwide by governments and non-governme...
Debate about what proportion of the Earth to protect often overshadows the question of how nature sh...
Debate about what proportion of the Earth to protect often overshadows the question of how nature sh...
We draw on the concept of ‘fit’ to understand how co-management and Payments for Ecosystem Services ...
This article explicitly connects a growing body of specific literature, the political ecology of con...
Participatory conservation projects imply direct involvement of local communities in natural conserv...
Who are the beneficiaries from participative approaches in conservation? The authors compare two pro...
The promotion of increased community participation in natural resource management and conservation b...
The literature on protected areas has increasingly focused on the impacts of conservation initiative...
Community-based conservation (CBC) approaches are complex governance spaces where diverse actors ope...
This study examines the possibilities of executing Community-Based Conservation (CBC) as a viable en...
Debate about what proportion of the Earth to protect often overshadows the question of how nature sh...
Co-published with RoutledgeThe links between policy and practice in natural resource management are ...
Debate about what proportion of the Earth to protect often overshadows the question of how nature sh...
Natural resource governance requires the collaboration of various stakeholders, including community,...
Participatory approaches to conservation have been applied worldwide by governments and non-governme...
Debate about what proportion of the Earth to protect often overshadows the question of how nature sh...
Debate about what proportion of the Earth to protect often overshadows the question of how nature sh...