2023
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-environ-112321-081348
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Governance and Conservation Effectiveness in Protected Areas and Indigenous and Locally Managed Areas

Yin Zhang,
Paige West,
Lerato Thakholi
et al.

Abstract: Increased conservation action to protect more habitat and species is fueling a vigorous debate about the relative effectiveness of different sorts of protected areas. Here we review the literature that compares the effectiveness of protected areas managed by states and areas managed by Indigenous peoples and/or local communities. We argue that these can be hard comparisons to make. Robust comparative case studies are rare, and the epistemic communities producing them are fractured by language, discipline, and … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The "epistemological disjuncture," between how communities understand and relate to land and ecosystems vis-à-vis central governments and capitalist interests creates risk not only of epistemological violence, but physical violence against "entangled more-than-human communities" (Favini 2018, 23-24, 27). The threats and instantiations of violence are being meant by insurgent claims-making, assertions of belonging, and diverse performances of ecological rights, often anchored in conceptualizations of ancestrality and folk-heritage (McIntosh and Renard 2009;Campbell et al 2021;Vandebroek et al 2021;Zhang et al 2023). Assertions of Black-Indigenous heritage, grassroots organizing around Black-Indigenous unity, and communality also serve to reframe resources as commons (Anderson 2007;Mollett 2014;Gould and Lewis 2018;Nisbett 2021;Veronesi et al 2022).…”
Section: Extractivism and The Cartographies Of Strugglementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The "epistemological disjuncture," between how communities understand and relate to land and ecosystems vis-à-vis central governments and capitalist interests creates risk not only of epistemological violence, but physical violence against "entangled more-than-human communities" (Favini 2018, 23-24, 27). The threats and instantiations of violence are being meant by insurgent claims-making, assertions of belonging, and diverse performances of ecological rights, often anchored in conceptualizations of ancestrality and folk-heritage (McIntosh and Renard 2009;Campbell et al 2021;Vandebroek et al 2021;Zhang et al 2023). Assertions of Black-Indigenous heritage, grassroots organizing around Black-Indigenous unity, and communality also serve to reframe resources as commons (Anderson 2007;Mollett 2014;Gould and Lewis 2018;Nisbett 2021;Veronesi et al 2022).…”
Section: Extractivism and The Cartographies Of Strugglementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This has been observed in the past through the establishment of strictly protected areas. Such strategies enhance ES supply while at the same time restricting ES access for large parts of the population and perceived by indigenous communities in Myanmar as a means to serve elites' interests (Zhang, 2023). While this may increase the percentage of protected area serving the government's interest, either little is being enforced or excessive harassment or evictions are being used serving a political agenda (Hunt, 2023).…”
Section: Quantifying Scenarios For Es Outcomesmentioning
confidence: 99%