Science for Place-based Socioecological Management: Lessons from the Maya Forest (Chiapas and Petén)

The role humans should play in conservation is a pervasive issue of debate in environmental thinking. Two long-established poles of this debate can be identified on a preservation-sustainable use continuum. At one extreme are use bans and natural science-based, top-down management for preservation....

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Main Authors: David Manuel-Navarrete, Scott Slocombe, Bruce Mitchell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2006-06-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol11/iss1/art8/
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spelling doaj-22849503c0254cc08a67d1b94d2396da2020-11-24T22:12:49ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872006-06-01111810.5751/ES-01608-1101081608Science for Place-based Socioecological Management: Lessons from the Maya Forest (Chiapas and Petén)David Manuel-Navarrete0Scott Slocombe1Bruce Mitchell2United Nations Economic Comission for Latin America and the CaribbeanGeography and Environmental Studies, Wilfrid Laurier UniversityDepartment of Geography, University of Waterloo.The role humans should play in conservation is a pervasive issue of debate in environmental thinking. Two long-established poles of this debate can be identified on a preservation-sustainable use continuum. At one extreme are use bans and natural science-based, top-down management for preservation. At the other extreme is community-based, multidisciplinary management for sustainable resource use and livelihoods. In this paper, we discuss and illustrate how these two strategies have competed and conflicted in conservation initiatives in the Maya forest (MF) of the Middle Usumacinta River watershed (Guatemala and Mexico). We further argue that both extremes have produced unconvincing results in terms of the region's sustainability. An alternative consists of sustainability initiatives based on place-based and integrated-knowledge approaches. These approaches imply a flexible combination of disciplines and types of knowledge in the context of nature-human interactions occurring in a place. They can be operationalized within the framework of sustainability science in three steps: 1) characterize the contextual circumstances that are most relevant for sustainability in a place; 2) identify the disciplines and knowledge(s) that need to be combined to appropriately address these contextual circumstances; and 3) decide how these disciplines and knowledge can be effectively combined and integrated. Epistemological flexibility in the design of analytic and implementation frameworks is key. Place-based and integrative-knowledge approaches strive to deal with local context and complexity, including that of human individuals and cultures. The success of any sustainability initiative will ultimately depend on its structural coupling with the context in which it is applied.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol11/iss1/art8/contextualizationintegrated conservationMaya forestplace-basedsustainability initiatives
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Manuel-Navarrete
Scott Slocombe
Bruce Mitchell
spellingShingle David Manuel-Navarrete
Scott Slocombe
Bruce Mitchell
Science for Place-based Socioecological Management: Lessons from the Maya Forest (Chiapas and Petén)
Ecology and Society
contextualization
integrated conservation
Maya forest
place-based
sustainability initiatives
author_facet David Manuel-Navarrete
Scott Slocombe
Bruce Mitchell
author_sort David Manuel-Navarrete
title Science for Place-based Socioecological Management: Lessons from the Maya Forest (Chiapas and Petén)
title_short Science for Place-based Socioecological Management: Lessons from the Maya Forest (Chiapas and Petén)
title_full Science for Place-based Socioecological Management: Lessons from the Maya Forest (Chiapas and Petén)
title_fullStr Science for Place-based Socioecological Management: Lessons from the Maya Forest (Chiapas and Petén)
title_full_unstemmed Science for Place-based Socioecological Management: Lessons from the Maya Forest (Chiapas and Petén)
title_sort science for place-based socioecological management: lessons from the maya forest (chiapas and petén)
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2006-06-01
description The role humans should play in conservation is a pervasive issue of debate in environmental thinking. Two long-established poles of this debate can be identified on a preservation-sustainable use continuum. At one extreme are use bans and natural science-based, top-down management for preservation. At the other extreme is community-based, multidisciplinary management for sustainable resource use and livelihoods. In this paper, we discuss and illustrate how these two strategies have competed and conflicted in conservation initiatives in the Maya forest (MF) of the Middle Usumacinta River watershed (Guatemala and Mexico). We further argue that both extremes have produced unconvincing results in terms of the region's sustainability. An alternative consists of sustainability initiatives based on place-based and integrated-knowledge approaches. These approaches imply a flexible combination of disciplines and types of knowledge in the context of nature-human interactions occurring in a place. They can be operationalized within the framework of sustainability science in three steps: 1) characterize the contextual circumstances that are most relevant for sustainability in a place; 2) identify the disciplines and knowledge(s) that need to be combined to appropriately address these contextual circumstances; and 3) decide how these disciplines and knowledge can be effectively combined and integrated. Epistemological flexibility in the design of analytic and implementation frameworks is key. Place-based and integrative-knowledge approaches strive to deal with local context and complexity, including that of human individuals and cultures. The success of any sustainability initiative will ultimately depend on its structural coupling with the context in which it is applied.
topic contextualization
integrated conservation
Maya forest
place-based
sustainability initiatives
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol11/iss1/art8/
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