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Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis and resolution of protected area-people conflicts in Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve, India.

01 Mar 2000-Environmental Conservation (Cambridge University Press)-Vol. 27, Iss: 1, pp 43-53
TL;DR: In the Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve in the Indian Himalayan region, the authors of as mentioned in this paper analyzed resource uses, management practices, economy and people's perceptions of problems and likely solutions.
Abstract: Conflicts between local people and protected area managers are a common problem in developing countries, but in many cases there has been little attempt to comprehensively characterize the underlying problems. Resource uses, management practices, economy and people's perceptions of problems and likely solutions were analysed in two villages near and two villages away from the core zone of Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve in the Indian Himalaya. Agriculture, although practised on less than 1% of the area, was the primary occupation of local people. Six annual crops of a total of 22 and all four horticultural crops on private farms were damaged by wildlife, but Reserve management provided compensation only for livestock killing by wildlife and compensation amounted to only 4–10% of the total assessed monetary value of killed livestock. A variety of wild plant products were used locally but 27 were marketed by more than 50% of surveyed families; income from wild products was substantially lower than that from crops and livestock. A sociocultural change from a subsistence to a market economy, together with changes in traditional land/resource rights and institutions, has led to a number of changes in land-use and management practices. The livestock population has declined, agricultural area has remained the same and people have started cultivating medicinal species in the last 20 years. These changes seem complementary to the goal of conservation. However, changes such as abandonment of some traditional food crops and stress on cash crops lacking fodder value, requiring substantial manure inputs derived from forest litter and livestock excreta, and causing severe soil erosion, seem to counter the goal of environmental conservation. Some government-managed Reserve Forest sites were similar to the Community Forests in terms of species richness, basal area and soil physico-chemical properties. Two Reserve Forest sites showed basal areas of 160.5–191.5 m2/ha, exceeding the highest values reported so far from the region. The formal institutional framework of resource management seems to be not as effective as the traditional informal system. The Reserve Management Plan lays more emphasis on legal protection than on the sustainable livelihood of local communities and has led to conflicts between local people and reserve managers. Plantation of fodder and medicinal species in degraded forest lands, suppression of economic exploitation of local people in the market, enhancement of local knowledge of the economic potential of biodiversity, incentives for cultivation of crops with comparative advantages and lesser risks of damage by wildlife, and rejuvenation of the traditional involvement of the whole village community in decison-making, could be the options for resolving conflicts between people and protected areas in this case.
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a review examines the social, economic, and political effects of environmental conservation projects as they are manifested in protected areas, focusing on people living in and displaced from protected areas and analyzing the worldwide growth of protected areas over the past 20 years.
Abstract: This review examines the social, economic, and political effects of environmental conservation projects as they are manifested in protected areas. We pay special attention to people living in and displaced from protected areas, analyze the worldwide growth of protected areas over the past 20 years, and offer suggestions for future research trajectories in anthropology. We examine protected areas as a way of seeing, understanding, and producing nature (environment) and culture (society) and as a way of attempting to manage and control the relationship between the two. We focus on social, economic, scientific, and political changes in places where there are protected areas and in the urban centers that control these areas. We also examine violence, conflict, power relations, and governmentality as they are connected to the processes of protection. Finally, we examine discourse and its effects and argue that anthropology needs to move beyond the current examinations of language and power to attend to the ways in which protected areas produce space, place, and peoples.

1,284 citations


Cites background from "Analysis and resolution of protecte..."

  • ...In some cases protected areas meant to change land-use rights create a joint land management with rights and responsibilities falling to both residents of reserves and wildlife managers, but local people still lose important rights to agricultural lands (Maikhuri et al. 2000)....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a critical review of recent writings that argue that people-oriented approaches to conservation have largely failed to achieve their main goal of protecting biological diversity is presented, concluding that recommendations linked to the renewed protectionist argument most likely will not provide long-term protection of biodiversity.
Abstract: This article presents a critical review of recent writings that argue that people-oriented approaches to conservation have largely failed to achieve their main goal--the protection of biological diversity. Based on an analysis of this problem, authors of these works conclude that biodiversity conservation initiatives should place renewed emphasis on authoritarian protection of national parks and other protected areas to safeguard critically threatened habitats worldwide. We examine five core themes in these writings. We conclude that, while many of their findings regarding shortcomings of current people-oriented approaches are well grounded, the overall arguments are incomplete because they largely ignore key aspects of social and political processes that shape how conservation interventions happen in specific contexts. As a result, recommendations linked to the renewed protectionist argument most likely will not provide long-term protection of biodiversity.

641 citations


Cites background from "Analysis and resolution of protecte..."

  • ...…produced a number of insights on participatory approaches (Albers and Grinspoon 1997; Freudenberger et al. 1997; Gibson and Marks 1995; Hough 1988; Hough and Sherpa 1989; Lehmkuhl et al. 1988; Maikhuri et al. 2000; Mehta and Kellert 1998; Naughton-Treves and Sanderson 1995; Ulfelder et al. 1998) ....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An overview of land abandonment, its driving forces and its consequences for landscape, biodiversity and humans is presented and it is suggested that farmland must be viewed in a context of multi-functionality to take advantage of ecosystem goods and services.
Abstract: Agricultural activities and their complex effects on nature conservation, and the services that ecosystems deliver to humans are controversial. We present an overview of land abandonment, its driving forces and its consequences for landscape, biodiversity and humans. A descriptive metaanalysis of independently published studies highlighted the fact that the abandonment of agricultural land is a phenomenon mostly driven by socio-economic factors such as immigration into areas where new economic opportunities are offered to rural people. Ecological drivers such as elevation and land mismanagement leading to soil erosion are of secondary importance. We identified the major problems related to abandonment of agricultural land and quantified their relative importance. In order of decreasing importance, they were biodiversity loss, increase of fire frequency and intensity, soil erosion and desertification, loss of cultural and/or aesthetic values, reduction of landscape diversity and reduction of water provision. The impacts of these problems were not equally relevant in all regions of the world. The abandonment of agricultural land may also benefit humans. The benefits include passive revegetation and active reforestation, water regulation, soil recovery, nutrient cycling and increased biodiversity and wilderness. In a world that is becoming less natural and more intensively exploited by humans, we suggest that (1) farmland must be viewed in a context of multi-functionality to take advantage of ecosystem goods and services, (2) at the global scale, the abandonment of agricultural land is mostly positive for humans and (3) there is a need for the implementation of policies based on the payments for environmental services that encourage human societies to reconcile agricultural use, nature conservation and ecological restoration.

621 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a geographic information system (GIS)-based multi-criteria decision-making approach for forest conservation planning at a landscape scale is presented, which enables decision makers to evaluate the relative priorities of conserving forest areas based on a set of preferences, criteria and indicators for the area.

264 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Overall, livestock predation was greatest in summer and autumn which corresponded with a peak in cropping agriculture; livestock are turned out to pasture and forest during the cropping season, and subsequently, are less well guarded than at other times.

197 citations


Cites background from "Analysis and resolution of protecte..."

  • ...…of domestic livestock have led to increased predation of domestic species by wild carnivores (Mishra, 1997; Namgail et al., 2007), and in most instances, a heavy financial burden is paid by pastoralists (Mishra, 1997; Maikhuri et al., 2000; Wang and Macdonald, 2006; Namgail et al., 2007)....

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References
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01 May 1993
TL;DR: Indigenous peoples with a historical continuity of resource-use practices often possess a broad knowledge base of the behavior of complex ecological systems in their own localities as mentioned in this paper, which has accumulated through a long series of observations transmitted from generation to generation.
Abstract: Indigenous peoples with a historical continuity of resource-use practices often possess a broad knowledge base of the behavior of complex ecological systems in their own localities. This knowledge has accumulated through a long series of observations transmitted from generation to generation. Such ''diachronic'' observations can be of great value and complement the ''synchronic''observations on which western science is based. Where indigenous peoples have depended, for long periods of time, on local environments for the provision of a variety of resources, they have developed a stake in conserving, and in some cases, enhancing, biodiversity. They are aware that biological diversity is a crucial factor in generating the ecological services and natural resources on which they depend. Some indigenous groups manipulate the local landscape to augment its heterogeneity, and some have been found to be motivated to restore biodiversity in degraded landscapes. Their practices for the conservation of biodiversity were grounded in a series of rules of thumb which are apparently arrived at through a trial and error process over a long historical time period. This implies that their knowledge base is indefinite and their implementation involves an intimate relationship with the belief system. Such knowledge is difficult for western science to understand. It is vital, however, that the value of the knowledge-practice-belief complex of indigenous peoples relating to conservation of biodiversity is fully recognized if ecosystems and biodiversity are to be managed sustainably. Conserving this knowledge would be most appropriately accomplished through promoting the community-based resource-management systems of indigenous peoples.

1,111 citations


"Analysis and resolution of protecte..." refers background in this paper

  • ...Exclusion of people from protected areas seems scarcely justifiable when one realizes the positive role of local communities in maintaining and enhancing biodiversity and their age-old dependence on resources within protected areas (McNeely 1988; Shengji 1991; Gomez-Pompa & Kaus 1992; Gadgil et al. 1993)....

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  • ...Date submitted: 10 March 1999 Date accepted: 19 October 1999 Environmental Conservation 27 (1): 43–53 © 2000 Foundation for Environmental Conservation * Correspondence: Dr R.K. Maikhuri (Hough 1988; McNeely 1988; Gadgil et al. 1993; BorriniFeyerabend 1996; Ghimire & Pimbert 1997)....

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  • ...…of people from protected areas seems scarcely justifiable when one realizes the positive role of local communities in maintaining and enhancing biodiversity and their age-old dependence on resources within protected areas (McNeely 1988; Shengji 1991; Gomez-Pompa & Kaus 1992; Gadgil et al. 1993)....

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01 Jan 1987

497 citations


"Analysis and resolution of protecte..." refers background in this paper

  • ...The observed rarity of many medicinal species has mostly been attributed to over-exploitation (Nayar & Sastry 1979), though rarity could also be due to the requirement of specialized habitats for growth and reproduction of medicinal species (Dobriyal et al. 1997)....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Analysis of the alleged economic loss due to livestock depredation by the snow leopard and the wolf, and the retaliatory responses of an agro-pastoral community around Kibber Wildlife Sanctuary in the Indian trans-Himalaya suggests the need to address the problem of increasing livestock holding in the long run is emphasized.
Abstract: Summary Livestock depredation by the snow leopard, Uncia uncia, and the wolf, Canis lupus, has resulted in a human-wildlife conflict that hinders the conservation of these globally-threatened species throughout their range This paper analyses the alleged economic loss due to livestock depredation by these carnivores, and the retaliatory responses of an agro-pastoral community around Kibber Wildlife Sanctuary in the Indian trans-Himalaya The three villages studied (80 households) attributed a total of 189 livestock deaths (18% of the livestock holding) over a period of 18 months to wild predators, and this would amount to a loss per household equivalent to half the average annual per capita income The financial compensation received by the villagers from the Government amounted to 3% of the perceived annual loss Recent intensification of the conflict seems related to a 377% increase in livestock holding in the last decade Villagers have been killing the wolf, though apparently not the snow leopard A self-financed compensation scheme, and modification of existing livestock pens are suggested as area-specific short-term measures to reduce the conflict The need to address the problem of increasing livestock holding in the long run is emphasized

364 citations


"Analysis and resolution of protecte..." refers background in this paper

  • ...…efforts have been made to analyse the impacts of selected national parks and wildlife sanctuaries on the livelihoods of local people in the Nepal (Hough & Sherpa 1989; Heinen 1993; Sharma & Shaw 1993; Nepal & Weber 1995) and Indian Himalayas (Kothari et al. 1989; Rawat & Uniyal 1993; Mishra 1997)....

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  • ...The protected area network comprises 3 biosphere reserves, 18 national parks and 71 wildlife sanctuaries occupying 9.2% area of the Indian Himalayas....

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  • ...A few efforts have been made to analyse the impacts of selected national parks and wildlife sanctuaries on the livelihoods of local people in the Nepal (Hough & Sherpa 1989; Heinen 1993; Sharma & Shaw 1993; Nepal & Weber 1995) and Indian Himalayas (Kothari et al. 1989; Rawat & Uniyal 1993; Mishra 1997)....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This important book explains in a clear, concise and very readable exposition, how economic incentives can be applied to creative approaches to conservation which complement development efforts.
Abstract: This important book explains in a clear, concise and very readable exposition, how economic incentives can be applied to creative approaches to conservation which complement development efforts.

346 citations


"Analysis and resolution of protecte..." refers background in this paper

  • ...Date submitted: 10 March 1999 Date accepted: 19 October 1999 Environmental Conservation 27 (1): 43–53 © 2000 Foundation for Environmental Conservation * Correspondence: Dr R.K. Maikhuri (Hough 1988; McNeely 1988; Gadgil et al. 1993; BorriniFeyerabend 1996; Ghimire & Pimbert 1997)....

    [...]

  • ...…of people from protected areas seems scarcely justifiable when one realizes the positive role of local communities in maintaining and enhancing biodiversity and their age-old dependence on resources within protected areas (McNeely 1988; Shengji 1991; Gomez-Pompa & Kaus 1992; Gadgil et al. 1993)....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Despite nearly a century of propaganda, conservation still proceeds at a snail's pace; progress still consists largely of letterhead pieties and convention oratory.
Abstract: Despite nearly a century of propaganda, conservation still proceeds at a snail's pace; progress still consists largely of letterhead pieties and convention oratory. On the back forty we still slip two steps backward for each forward stride. The usual answer to this dilemma is "more conservation education." No one will debate this, but is it certain that only the volume of education needs stepping up? Is something lacking in the content as well? Aldo Leopold (1966, p. 222-223)

341 citations

Trending Questions (1)
Which category of protected areas in India are local people not allowed to collect and use the biomass?

Plantation of fodder and medicinal species in degraded forest lands, suppression of economic exploitation of local people in the market, enhancement of local knowledge of the economic potential of biodiversity, incentives for cultivation of crops with comparative advantages and lesser risks of damage by wildlife, and rejuvenation of the traditional involvement of the whole village community in decison-making, could be the options for resolving conflicts between people and protected areas in this case.