Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Message from Kofi A. Annan, Secretary-General of the United Nations
- Macquarie Statement
- Contributors
- Introduction
- PART ONE THE CONTEXT
- PART TWO BIODIVERSITY: ITS CONSERVATION
- 5 Biodiversity Conservation in the Context of Sustainable Human Development: A Call to Action
- 6 Legal and Paralegal Rules for Biodiversity Conservation: A Sequence of Conceptual, Linguistic, and Legal Problems
- 7 Future Directions in Conservation of Biological Diversity: An Interdisciplinary Approach
- 8 Experience, Mistakes, and Challenges: The Implementation of the Convention on Biological Diversity in Brazil
- 9 EC Law and Biodiversity
- 10 Community-Based Biodiversity Conservation in the Pacific: Cautionary Lessons in “Regionalising” Environmental Governance
- PART THREE CONSERVATION MEASURES
- PART FOUR USES OF COMPONENTS OF BIODIVERSITY
- PART FIVE PROCESSES AFFECTING BIODIVERSITY
- PART SIX BIOSECURITY ISSUES
- PART SEVEN ACCESS AND BENEFIT-SHARING
- Index
10 - Community-Based Biodiversity Conservation in the Pacific: Cautionary Lessons in “Regionalising” Environmental Governance
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Message from Kofi A. Annan, Secretary-General of the United Nations
- Macquarie Statement
- Contributors
- Introduction
- PART ONE THE CONTEXT
- PART TWO BIODIVERSITY: ITS CONSERVATION
- 5 Biodiversity Conservation in the Context of Sustainable Human Development: A Call to Action
- 6 Legal and Paralegal Rules for Biodiversity Conservation: A Sequence of Conceptual, Linguistic, and Legal Problems
- 7 Future Directions in Conservation of Biological Diversity: An Interdisciplinary Approach
- 8 Experience, Mistakes, and Challenges: The Implementation of the Convention on Biological Diversity in Brazil
- 9 EC Law and Biodiversity
- 10 Community-Based Biodiversity Conservation in the Pacific: Cautionary Lessons in “Regionalising” Environmental Governance
- PART THREE CONSERVATION MEASURES
- PART FOUR USES OF COMPONENTS OF BIODIVERSITY
- PART FIVE PROCESSES AFFECTING BIODIVERSITY
- PART SIX BIOSECURITY ISSUES
- PART SEVEN ACCESS AND BENEFIT-SHARING
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
This chapter investigates the legal and institutional aspects of the region-wide promotion of “community-based conservation and natural resource management” as an environmental governance mechanism in the Pacific Island Region. There is a clear consensus among stakeholders that community-based approaches should now form the core of in situ biodiversity conservation efforts in Pacific Island Countries (PICs). Justifications for adopting this approach are broadly consistent with those applied in other regions of the world where rural communities are collaboratively engaged in conservation and natural resource management initiatives. These justifications may be grouped into two broad categories. First, the responsible government agencies have limited technical and other capacity to coercively regulate citizens’ everyday resource uses. Second, various economic, geographic, cultural and historical factors, including prevalence of subsistence livelihoods, highly valued and contested communal land tenure arrangements, and the widespread persistence of customary authority and institutions combine to indicate that in Pacific jurisdictions participatory and collaborative conservation and natural resource management approaches are likely to be more successful than either centralised regulation or individual actors negotiating within a market.
During the past two decades, community-based conservation and natural resource management has been the focus of much regional, national, and subnational programmatic activity in Pacific island countries, but legal and institutional reform has in general not accompanied this paradigm shift in island conservation practice.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Biodiversity Conservation, Law and Livelihoods: Bridging the North-South DivideIUCN Academy of Environmental Law Research Studies, pp. 193 - 224Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008