Community-Based Conservation of the Ngao River in Thailand: A Networked Story of Success

IF 2.2 3区 社会学 Q2 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
Peter Duker, Santi Klanarongchao
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract In the Ngao River basin of Northern Thailand, over 50 ethnic Karen communities practice successful riverine community-based conservation (CBC) programs. While institutional approaches provide insights for conservation successes, critical approaches are needed to understand the context that partially determines communities’ actions. Thus, drawing on political ecology and using a rooted networks framework to investigate the introduction and management of these programs, the first author, a North America-based researcher, remotely collaborated with the second, a local community researcher, to conduct qualitative fieldwork to understand the conditions and connections that shape and constrain communities. We found that networked relations with outsiders threatened food security and self-determination, and enabled opportunities to respond to these threats through river conservation. “Rooted” relations with the environment allowed communities to recognize the positive impacts of conservation. Understanding situated and entangled relationships within complex networks enables opportunities to support CBC programs that meet conservation and development goals.
基于社区的泰国怒江保护:一个成功的网络故事
摘要在泰国北部的Ngao河流域,50多个克伦族社区实施了成功的河流社区保护计划。虽然制度方法为保护成功提供了见解,但需要关键方法来理解部分决定社区行动的背景。因此,第一作者是一名北美研究人员,他利用政治生态学并使用扎根网络框架来调查这些项目的引入和管理,与第二作者是当地社区研究人员远程合作,进行定性实地调查,以了解塑造和约束社区的条件和联系。我们发现,与外来者的网络关系威胁到粮食安全和自决,并使人们有机会通过河流保护来应对这些威胁。与环境的“扎根”关系使社区认识到保护的积极影响。了解复杂网络中的位置关系和纠缠关系,有机会支持CBC项目,以实现保护和发展目标。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
8.00%
发文量
83
期刊介绍: Society and Natural Resources publishes cutting edge social science research that advances understanding of the interaction between society and natural resources.Social science research is extensive and comes from a number of disciplines, including sociology, psychology, political science, communications, planning, education, and anthropology. We welcome research from all of these disciplines and interdisciplinary social science research that transcends the boundaries of any single social science discipline. We define natural resources broadly to include water, air, wildlife, fisheries, forests, natural lands, urban ecosystems, and intensively managed lands. While we welcome all papers that fit within this broad scope, we especially welcome papers in the following four important and broad areas in the field: 1. Protected area management and governance 2. Stakeholder analysis, consultation and engagement; deliberation processes; governance; conflict resolution; social learning; social impact assessment 3. Theoretical frameworks, epistemological issues, and methodological perspectives 4. Multiscalar character of social implications of natural resource management
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