Governance and the making and breaking of social-ecological traps

Many countries in sub-Saharan Africa have areas of significant ecological importance that overlap with pressing development needs and high levels of natural resource dependence. This makes the design of effective natural resource governance and management systems both challenging and critical. In Gh...

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Main Authors: Dana M. Baker, Grant Murray, Andrew Kyei Agyare
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2018-03-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol23/iss1/art38/
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spelling doaj-0c4aa5ea456c49298c48c9d5afcf53152020-11-25T00:59:01ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872018-03-012313810.5751/ES-09992-2301389992Governance and the making and breaking of social-ecological trapsDana M. Baker0Grant Murray1Andrew Kyei Agyare2Duke University Marine Lab, Nicholas School of Environment, Duke University, Beaufort, North CarolinaDuke University Marine Lab, Nicholas School of Environment, Duke University, Beaufort, North CarolinaGhana Wildlife Division of the Forestry Commission, Accra, GhanaMany countries in sub-Saharan Africa have areas of significant ecological importance that overlap with pressing development needs and high levels of natural resource dependence. This makes the design of effective natural resource governance and management systems both challenging and critical. In Ghana, this challenge is made more complex by the necessity of connecting formal, state-led systems of governance with Ghana's informal governance systems through which customary authorities exert considerable control over land and resources. We present findings from two multimethod research projects in two regions of Ghana that have significant issues related to resource exploitation and that have experienced extensive management interventions. The goals of the research were to characterize the social-ecological traps from a local perspective, to describe how governance and management structures interact with and relate to those traps, and to discuss the strategies used and challenges encountered when community-based natural resource management initiatives seek to reverse persistent social-ecological traps. In both case studies, participants described persistent cycles of resource dependence, overexploitation, and unsustainable land-use practices, which are exacerbated by illegal logging, intensive agricultural development, and population growth. Findings highlight how natural resource management is constrained by a lack of capacity to implement and enforce state policies, ongoing tension between customary and state institutions, and ambiguity regarding management responsibility and resource tenure. Interventions included targeted governance reform that centred on improving linkages between customary and state institutions, new and nonlocal actors, and complementary investments in capacity building and training. We conclude with a discussion of implications for the design of effective natural resource governance regimes in Ghana and beyond.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol23/iss1/art38/community-based managementconservationdecentralizationGhanagovernanceprotected areas
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dana M. Baker
Grant Murray
Andrew Kyei Agyare
spellingShingle Dana M. Baker
Grant Murray
Andrew Kyei Agyare
Governance and the making and breaking of social-ecological traps
Ecology and Society
community-based management
conservation
decentralization
Ghana
governance
protected areas
author_facet Dana M. Baker
Grant Murray
Andrew Kyei Agyare
author_sort Dana M. Baker
title Governance and the making and breaking of social-ecological traps
title_short Governance and the making and breaking of social-ecological traps
title_full Governance and the making and breaking of social-ecological traps
title_fullStr Governance and the making and breaking of social-ecological traps
title_full_unstemmed Governance and the making and breaking of social-ecological traps
title_sort governance and the making and breaking of social-ecological traps
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Many countries in sub-Saharan Africa have areas of significant ecological importance that overlap with pressing development needs and high levels of natural resource dependence. This makes the design of effective natural resource governance and management systems both challenging and critical. In Ghana, this challenge is made more complex by the necessity of connecting formal, state-led systems of governance with Ghana's informal governance systems through which customary authorities exert considerable control over land and resources. We present findings from two multimethod research projects in two regions of Ghana that have significant issues related to resource exploitation and that have experienced extensive management interventions. The goals of the research were to characterize the social-ecological traps from a local perspective, to describe how governance and management structures interact with and relate to those traps, and to discuss the strategies used and challenges encountered when community-based natural resource management initiatives seek to reverse persistent social-ecological traps. In both case studies, participants described persistent cycles of resource dependence, overexploitation, and unsustainable land-use practices, which are exacerbated by illegal logging, intensive agricultural development, and population growth. Findings highlight how natural resource management is constrained by a lack of capacity to implement and enforce state policies, ongoing tension between customary and state institutions, and ambiguity regarding management responsibility and resource tenure. Interventions included targeted governance reform that centred on improving linkages between customary and state institutions, new and nonlocal actors, and complementary investments in capacity building and training. We conclude with a discussion of implications for the design of effective natural resource governance regimes in Ghana and beyond.
topic community-based management
conservation
decentralization
Ghana
governance
protected areas
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol23/iss1/art38/
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