The impact of coastal grabbing on community conservation – a global reconnaissance (original) (raw)
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Making Waves Integrating Coastal Conservation and Development
The authors bring a wonderful and stimulating blend of theoretical perspectives and practical examples to focus on multiple-use resources, conservation and protected areas, and other problems of coastal zone management. They show that conservation and development can be integrated through the timely and sensitive application of decision-making tools such as trade-off analysis. Diverse insights from planning, ecology, economics and geography are seamlessly integrated through a coherent approach of participatory management.' FIKRET BERKES
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Marine extractive reserves (MER) are being established in coastal areas of Brazil to protect 'traditional' coastal populations and the marine resources upon which their livelihoods depend. This paper examines the challenges Brazil's first open-water MER is facing in trying to achieve these goals. Results from a pilot project in Arraial do Cabo, Rio de Janeiro suggest that significant social barriers to collective action exist and that local resource governing institutions are not robust. Consequently, fishers are not becoming decisive players in the decision-making process. The implications of these conclusions for future maritime conservation policy in Brazil are explored. Published by Elsevier Ltd.