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9 - Involving resource users in the regulation of access to resources for the protection of ecosystem services provided by protected areas in Indonesia

from Part I - Conservation needs and priorities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 November 2009

Abdul Halim
Affiliation:
The Nature Conservancy – Southeast Asia Center for Marine Protected Areas Jl. Pengembak No. 2, Sanur 80228 Bali, Indonesia
Tri Soekirman
Affiliation:
The Nature Conservancy – Southeast Asia Center for Marine Protected Areas Jl. Pengembak No. 2, Sanur 80228 Bali, Indonesia
Widodo Ramono
Affiliation:
The Nature Conservancy – Indonesia Country Program Jl Wijaya XIII No. 9, Kabayoran Baru Jakarta Selatan 12160 Indonesia
Navjot S. Sodhi
Affiliation:
National University of Singapore
Greg Acciaioli
Affiliation:
National University of Singapore
Maribeth Erb
Affiliation:
National University of Singapore
Alan Khee-Jin Tan
Affiliation:
National University of Singapore
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Summary

Introduction

Natural resources have a limited capacity to sustain use and therefore use needs to be managed (and often restricted) to sustain ecosystem services (e.g. extractive use, tourism, flood control, shoreline protection, etc.). Protected-area management is one management tool that may be applied to manage use. Protected-area management differs from other types of resource-use management, such as catch quota or prohibited fishing gears, in the sense that regulations on use differ between zones within the protected area, and between the protected areas on the one hand and the surrounding area on the other hand.

Deciding on who should have access to resources, and how to regulate access is the core of protected-area management. In this chapter, we show how The Nature Conservancy (TNC), an international organization working in Indonesia, works together with government agencies, NGOs and local communities to manage use in some of the most biodiverse areas on Earth.

As its core approach to conservation, TNC adopted ‘conservation by design’ (The Nature Conservancy 2001), which is in essence a project-management cycle comprising setting priorities, developing strategies, taking action and measuring performance or management impact. The two spatial levels at which this approach is applied are the ecoregion and the site. At the ecoregional level, conservation by design mostly considers spatial patterns in nature at a scale of hundreds to thousands of kilometres to decide where conservation action is needed (Groves et al. 2002).

Type
Chapter
Information
Biodiversity and Human Livelihoods in Protected Areas
Case Studies from the Malay Archipelago
, pp. 122 - 138
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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References

Burke, L., Selig, E. & Spalding, M. (2002). Reefs at Risk in Southeast Asia. Washington, DC: World Resource Institute.Google Scholar
,Anon. (1999). Final Report Environmental Impact Assessment Scoping Study for Komodo National Park, PT. Indonesia: Dames & Moore.Google Scholar
Donnelly, R., Neville, D. & Mous, P. (2003). Report on a rapid ecological assessment of the Raja Ampat Islands, Papua, Eastern Indonesia, held October 30–November 22, 2002. Bali, Indonesia: The Nature Conservancy Southeast Asia Center for Marine Protected Areas.
Francis, J., Johnstone, R., Hof, T. V., Zwol, C. V. & Sadacharan, D., eds. (2003). Training for the Sustainable Management of Marine Protected Areas: A Training Manual for MPA Managers. Nairobi, Kenya: Coastal Zone Management Center/Western Indian Ocean Marine Science Association.Google Scholar
Groves, C. R., Jensen, D. B., Valutis, L. L.et al. (2002). Planning for biodiversity conservation : putting conservation science into practice. BioScience, 52, 499–512.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mikalsen, K. H. & Jentoft, S. (2001). From user-groups to stakeholders? The public interest in fisheries management. Marine Policy, 25, 281–292.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pet, J. S. & Yeager, C. (2000). 25 Year Master Plan for Management of Komodo National Park, Book 3: Site Planning. Jakarta, Indonesia: The Nature Conservancy.Google Scholar
Singleton, J. & McDonough, B. (2002). Environmental Impact and Carrying Capacity Assessment for Implementation of Komodo National Park Long-Term Management Plan. URS Australia Pty Ltd., East Perth, Western Australia, Australia: Report to The Nature Conservancy Coastal and Marine Program, Indonesia.Google Scholar
The Nature Conservancy (2001). Conservation by Design: A Framework for Mission Success. Jakarta, Indonesia: The Nature Conservancy.Google Scholar

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