scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Local Participation in Natural Resource Monitoring: a Characterization of Approaches

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
A typology of monitoring categories, defined by their degree of local participation, is suggested, ranging from no local involvement with monitoring undertaken by professional researchers to an entirely local effort with monitoring undertook by local people, to help develop a protocol for monitoring in developing countries.
Abstract
The monitoring of trends in the status of species or habitats is routine in developed countries, where it is funded by the state or large nongovernmental organizations and often involves large numbers of skilled amateur volunteers. Far less monitoring of natural resources takes place in developing countries, where state agencies have small budgets, there are fewer skilled professionals or amateurs, and socioeconomic conditions prevent development of a culture of volunteerism. The resulting lack of knowledge about trends in species and habitats presents a serious challenge for detecting, understanding, and reversing declines in natural resource values. International environmental agreements require signatories undertake systematic monitoring of their natural resources, but no system exists to guide the development and expansion of monitoring schemes. To help develop such a protocol, we suggest a typology of monitoring categories, defined by their degree of local participation, ranging from no local involvement with monitoring undertaken by professional researchers to an entirely local effort with monitoring undertaken by local people. We assessed the strengths and weaknesses of each monitoring category and the potential of each to be sustainable in developed or developing countries. Locally based monitoring is particularly relevant in developing countries, where it can lead to rapid decisions

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

What's in a name? Unpacking “participatory” environmental monitoring

TL;DR: In this paper, a systematic review of PEM projects reported in peer-reviewed journals (n = 146) explores the main ways in which participation is operationalized and whose interests it serves.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiple use forestry planning: Timber and Brazil nut management in the community forests of Northern Bolivia

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze community forest management plans in Northern Bolivia to examine whether community residents participated in the development and implementation of the timber management plans, and the extent to which proponents of timber management plan attempted to integrate Brazil nut management into timber harvesting.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Paradigm Shift in Water Quality Governance in a Transitional Context: A Critical Study about the Empowerment of Local Governance in Georgia

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the case of Georgia, a transitional country in particular, focusing on how local governance entities can be empowered and what obstacles water quality governance encounters in Georgia Qualitative research design is the main research method implemented in this study.

Impacts of forest and land management on biodiversity and carbon

TL;DR: In this article, the impacts of changes to forest and land management on both carbon stocks and emissions, and biodiversity are often complex and non-linear, depending on the types of activities, the prior ecosystem state and the wider landscape context.
References
More filters
Book

Bird Census Techniques

TL;DR: Purpose and design in counting birds census errors territory mapping methods line transects point contacts catching and marking counting individual species counting colonial flocking and nesting birds distribution studies description and measurement of bird habitat chapter summaries and points to consider.
Book

Sacred Ecology: Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Resource Management

Fikret Berkes
TL;DR: In this article, a knowledge-practice-belief complex of traditional ecological knowledge is proposed to deal with the topic of traditional knowledge specifically in the context of natural resource management, and a diversity of relationships that different groups have developed with their environment is explored.
Journal ArticleDOI

Monitoring of biological diversity in space and time

TL;DR: This work reviews recent developments in methods and designs that aim to integrate sources of error to provide unbiased estimates of change in biological diversity and to suggest the potential causes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Money for nothing? A call for empirical evaluation of biodiversity conservation investments.

TL;DR: The field of conservation policy must adopt state-of-the-art program evaluation methods to determine what works, and when, if it is to stem the global decline of biodiversity and improve the effectiveness of conservation investments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Monitoring for conservation.

TL;DR: It is argued that monitoring should not be viewed as a stand-alone activity, but instead as a component of a larger process of either conservation-oriented science or management, which would lead to substantial increases in the efficiency and usefulness of monitoring results in conservation.
Related Papers (5)