Island partnerships building collective impact

IF 1.6 Q3 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Sally Bryant, H. Bower, S. Bower, P. Copley, P. Dann, Darcelle Matassoni, D. Sprod, D. Sutherland
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

If conservation depends on people, then community partnerships are the lynchpin to conservation success. The contribution of local knowledge, intellectual capital and volunteer labour not only saves project managers invaluable time and money, it fosters ownership and longevity into conservation initiatives well beyond their projected timeframe. Island communities are socially and culturally diverse and driven by a range of motivations. Hence, if we are to deliver conservation programs at scale, we need to better understand and embed these drivers into program design. We present four contemporary case studies on major populated islands in Australia where community collaborations are building the collective impact needed to underpin conservation success. They contain key learnings about community involvement, to help guide managers with future island planning and avoid some pitfalls.
建立集体影响的岛屿伙伴关系
如果保护取决于人,那么社区伙伴关系是保护成功的关键。当地知识、智力资本和志愿者劳动的贡献不仅为项目经理节省了宝贵的时间和金钱,而且还促进了保护计划的所有权和寿命,远远超出了计划的时间范围。岛屿社区具有社会和文化多样性,并受到一系列动机的驱动。因此,如果我们要大规模实施保护项目,我们需要更好地理解并将这些驱动因素嵌入到项目设计中。我们介绍了澳大利亚主要人口稠密岛屿的四个当代案例研究,其中社区合作正在建立支持保护成功所需的集体影响。它们包含了关于社区参与的关键经验,有助于指导管理人员进行未来岛屿规划,并避免一些陷阱。
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来源期刊
Pacific Conservation Biology
Pacific Conservation Biology Environmental Science-Nature and Landscape Conservation
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
6.70%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: Pacific Conservation Biology provides an important discussion forum for regional conservation issues, debate about management priorities, and dissemination of research results. The journal publishes original research, reviews, perspectives and book reviews.
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