Building Participation in Large-scale Conservation: Lessons from Belize and Panama

Motivated by biogeography and a desire for alignment with the funding priorities of donors, the twenty-first century has seen big international NGOs shifting towards a large-scale conservation approach. This shift has meant that even before stakeholders at the national and local scale are involved,...

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Main Author: Jesse Guite Hastings
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2015-01-01
Series:Conservation & Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.conservationandsociety.org/article.asp?issn=0972-4923;year=2015;volume=13;issue=3;spage=221;epage=231;aulast=Hastings
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spelling doaj-351604baa7794301b5f76c1b1f31d93d2020-11-24T22:34:25ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsConservation & Society0972-49232015-01-0113322123110.4103/0972-4923.170393Building Participation in Large-scale Conservation: Lessons from Belize and PanamaJesse Guite HastingsMotivated by biogeography and a desire for alignment with the funding priorities of donors, the twenty-first century has seen big international NGOs shifting towards a large-scale conservation approach. This shift has meant that even before stakeholders at the national and local scale are involved, conservation programmes often have their objectives defined and funding allocated. This paper uses the experiences of Conservation International′s Marine Management Area Science (MMAS) programme in Belize and Panama to explore how to build participation at the national and local scale while working within the bounds of the current conservation paradigm. Qualitative data about MMAS was gathered through a multi-sited ethnographic research process, utilising document review, direct observation, and semi-structured interviews with 82 informants in Belize, Panama, and the United States of America. Results indicate that while a large-scale approach to conservation disadvantages early national and local stakeholder participation, this effect can be mediated through focusing engagement efforts, paying attention to context, building horizontal and vertical partnerships, and using deliberative processes that promote learning. While explicit consideration of geopolitics and local complexity alongside biogeography in the planning phase of a large-scale conservation programme is ideal, actions taken by programme managers during implementation can still have a substantial impact on conservation outcomes.http://www.conservationandsociety.org/article.asp?issn=0972-4923;year=2015;volume=13;issue=3;spage=221;epage=231;aulast=HastingsBINGOsdonorsconservationparticipationscaleBelizePanama
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jesse Guite Hastings
spellingShingle Jesse Guite Hastings
Building Participation in Large-scale Conservation: Lessons from Belize and Panama
Conservation & Society
BINGOs
donors
conservation
participation
scale
Belize
Panama
author_facet Jesse Guite Hastings
author_sort Jesse Guite Hastings
title Building Participation in Large-scale Conservation: Lessons from Belize and Panama
title_short Building Participation in Large-scale Conservation: Lessons from Belize and Panama
title_full Building Participation in Large-scale Conservation: Lessons from Belize and Panama
title_fullStr Building Participation in Large-scale Conservation: Lessons from Belize and Panama
title_full_unstemmed Building Participation in Large-scale Conservation: Lessons from Belize and Panama
title_sort building participation in large-scale conservation: lessons from belize and panama
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Conservation & Society
issn 0972-4923
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Motivated by biogeography and a desire for alignment with the funding priorities of donors, the twenty-first century has seen big international NGOs shifting towards a large-scale conservation approach. This shift has meant that even before stakeholders at the national and local scale are involved, conservation programmes often have their objectives defined and funding allocated. This paper uses the experiences of Conservation International′s Marine Management Area Science (MMAS) programme in Belize and Panama to explore how to build participation at the national and local scale while working within the bounds of the current conservation paradigm. Qualitative data about MMAS was gathered through a multi-sited ethnographic research process, utilising document review, direct observation, and semi-structured interviews with 82 informants in Belize, Panama, and the United States of America. Results indicate that while a large-scale approach to conservation disadvantages early national and local stakeholder participation, this effect can be mediated through focusing engagement efforts, paying attention to context, building horizontal and vertical partnerships, and using deliberative processes that promote learning. While explicit consideration of geopolitics and local complexity alongside biogeography in the planning phase of a large-scale conservation programme is ideal, actions taken by programme managers during implementation can still have a substantial impact on conservation outcomes.
topic BINGOs
donors
conservation
participation
scale
Belize
Panama
url http://www.conservationandsociety.org/article.asp?issn=0972-4923;year=2015;volume=13;issue=3;spage=221;epage=231;aulast=Hastings
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