Trade-offs between conservation and development in communitybased management initiatives

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Author
Delgado Serrano, María del Mar
Publisher
Uopen JournalsDate
2017Subject
ArgentinaCBNRM
Colombia
Common pool resources
Latin America
Mexico
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Show full item recordAbstract
Community-based management (CBM) has attracted much interest as
a conservation and development strategy in natural resource-dependent communities
in recent decades. However, most initiatives fail to achieve both objectives.
The most analyzed CBM strategies in the literature include donor- and government-
driven initiatives, but other types exist as well. The research objective was
to identify the internal and external factors that influence the trade-offs between
conservation and development in three internally driven CBM initiatives in Latin
America: a long-term indigenous-based conservation strategy, the constitutional
recognition of ancestral land rights of Afro-American communities and artisanal
fisheries management. The results showed that livelihoods depend on natural
resources, but none of the cases identified a balance between conservation and
development. Community activities are not the primary cause of natural resource
degradation. Conservation is supported by ethnicity and cultural values and is
challenged by current development models and worldviews that push intensification
of resource use and by power asymmetries. Internal pressures include limited
rule compliance and enforcement authority to stop free-riding and unauthorized
activities. Internal challenges for development include the lack of capacities, rigid
rules and non-inclusive CBM, and the inertia and risk aversion that prevail in
many communities. External challenges include the lack of economic incentives
and compensation models that enable welfare opportunities linked to sustainable
management