伙伴关系对保护和发展的贡献:来自安博塞利的见解

IF 1 Q3 HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM
T. Mugo, I. Visseren-Hamakers, R. Duim
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引用次数: 1

摘要

几十年来,学术界和实践者就如何协调保护和发展目标进行了激烈的辩论。在撒哈拉以南非洲,将生物多样性保护与生计目标结合起来的努力引发了从单纯的保护区方法向混合方案的转变,包括考虑保护区附近社区生计需求的多种伙伴关系安排。这些伙伴关系通常包括提供收入和就业机会的旅游业。肯尼亚安博塞利景观的未来一直是这些辩论的一个组成部分,因为它面临着长期的保护和发展挑战。许多倡议,往往以伙伴关系安排的形式,试图解决这些挑战。通过使用可持续生计框架(SLF)和一套指标来衡量对保护的贡献,我们研究了其中两个伙伴关系——安博塞利生态系统信托基金(AET)和大生活基金会(BLF)——旨在了解它们在应对这些挑战方面的贡献程度。通过文献分析、深度访谈、焦点小组讨论、非参与性观察和非正式谈话收集数据。研究结果表明,AET和BLF都能够解决生物多样性丧失的直接驱动因素(如人类野生动物冲突、偷猎、无计划的基础设施开发),以及在较小程度上解决间接驱动因素,如贫困和土地细分。通过这两个伙伴关系的运作,更多的社区成员通过就业机会和其他金钱奖励和教育获得了特定的社区资本资产。然而,目前尚不清楚生计效益是否以及如何转化为对野生动物保护的真正和长期支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Contributions of Partnerships to Conservation and Development: Insights from Amboseli
For several decades, both academics and practitioners have fiercely debated how to reconcile conservation and development objectives. In Sub-Saharan Africa, efforts to align biodiversity conservation and livelihood goals have triggered a shift from pure protected area approaches to a hybrid scenario, including diverse partnership arrangements, that consider livelihood needs of communities neighboring protected areas. These partnerships often include tourism to provide income and jobs. The future of the Amboseli landscape in Kenya has been an integral part of these debates, since it has faced long-lasting conservation and development challenges. Many initiatives, often in the form of partnership arrangements, have tried to address these challenges. By using the Sustainable Livelihood Framework (SLF) and a set of indicators to measure the contributions to conservation, we examine two of these partnerships—the Amboseli Ecosystem Trust (AET) and Big Life Foundation (BLF)—with the aim of understanding the extent to which they contribute to addressing these challenges. Data were collected using document analysis, in-depth interviews, focus group discussions, nonparticipant observation, and informal conversations. Findings show that both AET and BLF have been able to address direct drivers of biodiversity loss (such as human wildlife conflicts, poaching, unplanned infrastructural developments) and—to a much lesser extent—the indirect drivers, such as poverty and land subdivision. Through the workings of both partnerships, more community members have gained access to specific community capital assets, through employment opportunities and other monetary incentives and education. However, it is not clear if and how the livelihood benefits transfer to real and long-term support for wildlife conservation.
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来源期刊
Tourism Review International
Tourism Review International HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM-
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
11.80%
发文量
19
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