Meghan K. Tait, Kapono Matthew Gaughen, Anita Tsang, Maya M. Walton, Stacia D. Marcoux, Luna Kekoa, Melissa Kunz, Mehana Blaich Vaughan
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Our team, which included resource managers, Western and indigenous scientists, community leaders, students, agency, and university staff engaged in collaborative management efforts in Hawaiʻi, developed an approach to monitor the social and cultural impacts of DAR’s management actions. Through online collaborative workshops with community members and non-profit leaders engaged in marine conservation in Hawaiʻi, we co-developed socio-cultural principles and indicators based on their reciprocal relationships with the nearshore environment. During the workshops, we used small group activities, snow cards, sorting, and categorization to generate nine fundamental principles, with associated indicators, to guide marine management in Hawaiʻi. Many of the principles and indicators are comparable to those developed in other parts of the Pacific, revolving around themes including the perpetuation of local and indigenous knowledge across generations, and access to land and natural resources. Participants also suggested themes less prevalent in other research, such as the need to evaluate impacts of tourism on community relationships with coastal areas. We offer recommendations for the development of socio-cultural principles and indicators in other place-based contexts, and emphasize the importance of on-going community collaboration. Developing a socio-cultural monitoring framework with community members impacted by marine management decisions could enable others engaged in collaborative efforts, including government agencies, to holistically understand and address impacts of their policies and actions. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
海洋管理者通常在规划和评估中使用生态指标,但很少有计划监测管理对社会和文化的影响。识别和监控社区与其环境关系的社会和文化方面的实用方法可以帮助许多机构了解他们为实现保护目标所做的努力产生的影响。夏威夷州土地和自然资源部水产资源处(DAR)发起了霍洛穆阿海洋计划(Holomua Marine Initiative),旨在与社区合作,加强共同管理工作,其中包括将社会文化方面纳入海洋管理的规划和评估中。我们的团队成员包括在夏威夷从事合作管理工作的资源管理人员、西方和本土科学家、社区领袖、学生、机构和大学工作人员,他们开发了一种方法来监测 DAR 管理行动的社会和文化影响。通过与夏威夷从事海洋保护工作的社区成员和非营利组织领导人开展在线合作研讨会,我们根据他们与近岸环境的互惠关系,共同制定了社会文化原则和指标。在研讨会期间,我们利用小组活动、雪花卡、排序和分类等方法制定了九项基本原则和相关指标,以指导夏威夷的海洋管理。其中许多原则和指标与太平洋其他地区制定的原则和指标相似,围绕的主题包括地方和土著知识的世代传承以及土地和自然资源的获取。与会者还提出了其他研究中较少涉及的主题,如需要评估旅游业对社区与沿海地区关系的影响。我们为在其他地方制定社会文化原则和指标提供了建议,并强调了持续的社区合作的重要性。与受海洋管理决策影响的社区成员一起制定社会文化监测框架,可以使其他参与合作的人,包括政府机构,全面了解和应对其政策和行动的影响。监测海洋管理对当地和原住民社区的多层次社会文化影响有可能转变管理目标,提高保护全球沿海资源倡议的长期有效性和支持度。
Holomua Marine Initiative: community-generated socio-cultural principles and indicators for marine conservation and management in Hawaiʻi
Marine managers commonly use ecological indicators in planning and evaluations; however, few programs monitor social and cultural impacts of management. Practical approaches to identifying and monitoring social and cultural aspects of communities’ relationships with their environment could assist many agencies in understanding the impacts of their efforts to achieve conservation goals. The Hawaiʻi Department of Land and Natural Resources, Division of Aquatic Resources (DAR) launched the Holomua Marine Initiative to collaborate and engage with communities to strengthen co-management efforts, which included integrating socio-cultural aspects into the planning and assessment of marine management. Our team, which included resource managers, Western and indigenous scientists, community leaders, students, agency, and university staff engaged in collaborative management efforts in Hawaiʻi, developed an approach to monitor the social and cultural impacts of DAR’s management actions. Through online collaborative workshops with community members and non-profit leaders engaged in marine conservation in Hawaiʻi, we co-developed socio-cultural principles and indicators based on their reciprocal relationships with the nearshore environment. During the workshops, we used small group activities, snow cards, sorting, and categorization to generate nine fundamental principles, with associated indicators, to guide marine management in Hawaiʻi. Many of the principles and indicators are comparable to those developed in other parts of the Pacific, revolving around themes including the perpetuation of local and indigenous knowledge across generations, and access to land and natural resources. Participants also suggested themes less prevalent in other research, such as the need to evaluate impacts of tourism on community relationships with coastal areas. We offer recommendations for the development of socio-cultural principles and indicators in other place-based contexts, and emphasize the importance of on-going community collaboration. Developing a socio-cultural monitoring framework with community members impacted by marine management decisions could enable others engaged in collaborative efforts, including government agencies, to holistically understand and address impacts of their policies and actions. Monitoring layered socio-cultural impacts of marine management on local and indigenous communities has the potential to shift management goals, and enhance long-term effectiveness and support for initiatives to protect coastal resources worldwide.
The post Holomua Marine Initiative: community-generated socio-cultural principles and indicators for marine conservation and management in Hawaiʻi first appeared on Ecology & Society.
期刊介绍:
Ecology and Society is an electronic, peer-reviewed, multi-disciplinary journal devoted to the rapid dissemination of current research. Manuscript submission, peer review, and publication are all handled on the Internet. Software developed for the journal automates all clerical steps during peer review, facilitates a double-blind peer review process, and allows authors and editors to follow the progress of peer review on the Internet. As articles are accepted, they are published in an "Issue in Progress." At four month intervals the Issue-in-Progress is declared a New Issue, and subscribers receive the Table of Contents of the issue via email. Our turn-around time (submission to publication) averages around 350 days.
We encourage publication of special features. Special features are comprised of a set of manuscripts that address a single theme, and include an introductory and summary manuscript. The individual contributions are published in regular issues, and the special feature manuscripts are linked through a table of contents and announced on the journal''s main page.
The journal seeks papers that are novel, integrative and written in a way that is accessible to a wide audience that includes an array of disciplines from the natural sciences, social sciences, and the humanities concerned with the relationship between society and the life-supporting ecosystems on which human wellbeing ultimately depends.