扩大保护区:修复代际社会资本,而不是走阻力最小的道路

IF 6.9 2区 管理学 Q2 GREEN & SUSTAINABLE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Camila Rojas, B. Bynum Boley, Leon Mach, Jesse B. Abrams
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引用次数: 0

摘要

随着许多国际实体通过“30x30全球倡议”推动到2030年保护30%的陆地和海洋栖息地,保护区(PA)的扩张将不可避免地与拥有PA管理生活经验的人群以及他们的社区对先前PA建立的承诺和成果如何实现的集体记忆相关联。最近有一个社区正在经历政府扩大PA的愿望,那就是Ngöbe Salt Creek原住民社区,它位于巴拿马Bocas del Toro的Bastimentos岛国家海洋公园内及其周围。这一定性案例研究运用代际社会资本的视角来证明,时间并不能治愈过去对公园管理的不满,因为破碎的社会资本是一种代际创伤。作者建议,修复社会资本对于实现未来可持续旅游和全球PA目标至关重要,但这将是一个长期和有意的过程,以克服对未兑现承诺的集体记忆。虽然政府可能会发现在阻力较小的地区扩大pa是权宜之计,但我们建议投资于修复社会资本可能会带来更好的社会和环境结果,并更好地符合可持续旅游和协作治理的精神。关键词:保护区协同治理社会资本社区旅游披露声明作者未报告潜在利益冲突资助研究由佐治亚大学的拉丁美洲和加勒比研究所(LACSI)修补器基金会研究生实地研究奖资助。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Expanding protected areas: a case for repairing intergenerational social capital rather than taking the path of least resistance
AbstractWith many international entities pushing for the protection of 30% of terrestrial and marine habitat by 2030 through the 30x30 global initiative, the expansion of protected areas (PA) will inevitably interface with populations carrying lived experiences of PA management as well as their community’s collective memory of how the promises and outcomes of previous PA establishments materialized. One community recently experiencing a government’s desire to expand a PA is the Ngöbe Indigenous community of Salt Creek, located in and around the Bastimentos Island National Marine Park in Bocas del Toro, Panama. This qualitative case study applies an intergenerational social capital lens to demonstrate that time does not heal past grievances with park administration as broken social capital is a type of intergenerational trauma. It is suggested that repairing social capital is vital to achieving future sustainable tourism and global PA targets but will be a long and intentional process to overcome the collective memory of broken promises. While governments may find it expedient to expand PAs in areas with less resistance, we suggest the investment in repairing social capital will likely lead to better social and environmental outcomes and better align with the ethos of sustainable tourism and collaborative governance.Keywords: Protected areascollaborative governancesocial capitalcommunity tourism Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Additional informationFundingStudy funded by UGA’s Latin America and Caribbean Studies Institute’s (LACSI) Tinker Foundation Graduate Field Research Award.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
23.10
自引率
8.90%
发文量
91
期刊介绍: The Journal of Sustainable Tourism advances critical understanding of the relationships between tourism and sustainable development. The journal publishes theoretical, conceptual and empirical research that explores one or more of the economic, social, cultural, political, organisational or environmental aspects of the subject. The Journal of Sustainable Tourism encourages critical views, as well as new ideas and approaches in relation to the theory and practice linking tourism and sustainability.
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