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Adaptive co-management of conservation conflicts – An interactional experiment in the context of German national parks

Social-ecological systems are characterized by complexity, uncertainty, and change. Adaptive co-management may help to improve adaptability and resilience and to develop ‘no-regret strategies’ for a sustainable management. It is a dynamic, inductive, and self-organized process based on social learni...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ehrhart, Stefan, Schraml, Ulrich
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6218403/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30417152
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00890
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author Ehrhart, Stefan
Schraml, Ulrich
author_facet Ehrhart, Stefan
Schraml, Ulrich
author_sort Ehrhart, Stefan
collection PubMed
description Social-ecological systems are characterized by complexity, uncertainty, and change. Adaptive co-management may help to improve adaptability and resilience and to develop ‘no-regret strategies’ for a sustainable management. It is a dynamic, inductive, and self-organized process based on social learning and collaboration. In this regard, conservation conflicts, conflicts between humans about wildlife, are a contemporary environmental management issue. Their management may be facilitated through adaptive co-management. However, adaptive co-management typically emerges because of a crisis or changing context and is difficult to be applied intentionally. We hypothesize that it may be possible to lay the ground for an adaptive co-management process by activating stakeholders to interact experimentally without a prescriptive application of adaptive co-management criteria. We examined conservation conflicts in the context of three German national parks, where we triggered interaction between 68 stakeholders in nine moderated focus groups. These were recorded and analyzed. Stakeholders discussed similar conflict issues and conflict management suggestions. Subsequently, we conducted a literature synthesis, resulting in 13 adaptive co-management characteristics, and analyzed concurrencies between these and stakeholders' management suggestions. Management suggestions reflected collaborative, interactional, structural, and practice-oriented adaptive co-management characteristics, while political context, rules, adaptability, learning, and monitoring were underrepresented. These underrepresented adaptive co-management characteristics may be harder to be recognized by stakeholders. An implementation of stakeholder-based management suggestions may prepare the systems for change. However, policy windows and resilience have to be observed, underrepresented characteristics have to be examined, and political context, long-term support, monitoring, and facilitation have to be considered. The approach fosters conservation conflict solution. The results could help protected area managers to further develop a local process. The experiment empowered stakeholders and resulted in case-specific suggestions, backed up by adaptive co-management literature. Research should focus on bridging knowledge between case studies as well as between politics, management, stakeholders, and scientists and on further examining stakeholders' capabilities to develop adaptive co-management approaches.
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spelling pubmed-62184032018-11-09 Adaptive co-management of conservation conflicts – An interactional experiment in the context of German national parks Ehrhart, Stefan Schraml, Ulrich Heliyon Article Social-ecological systems are characterized by complexity, uncertainty, and change. Adaptive co-management may help to improve adaptability and resilience and to develop ‘no-regret strategies’ for a sustainable management. It is a dynamic, inductive, and self-organized process based on social learning and collaboration. In this regard, conservation conflicts, conflicts between humans about wildlife, are a contemporary environmental management issue. Their management may be facilitated through adaptive co-management. However, adaptive co-management typically emerges because of a crisis or changing context and is difficult to be applied intentionally. We hypothesize that it may be possible to lay the ground for an adaptive co-management process by activating stakeholders to interact experimentally without a prescriptive application of adaptive co-management criteria. We examined conservation conflicts in the context of three German national parks, where we triggered interaction between 68 stakeholders in nine moderated focus groups. These were recorded and analyzed. Stakeholders discussed similar conflict issues and conflict management suggestions. Subsequently, we conducted a literature synthesis, resulting in 13 adaptive co-management characteristics, and analyzed concurrencies between these and stakeholders' management suggestions. Management suggestions reflected collaborative, interactional, structural, and practice-oriented adaptive co-management characteristics, while political context, rules, adaptability, learning, and monitoring were underrepresented. These underrepresented adaptive co-management characteristics may be harder to be recognized by stakeholders. An implementation of stakeholder-based management suggestions may prepare the systems for change. However, policy windows and resilience have to be observed, underrepresented characteristics have to be examined, and political context, long-term support, monitoring, and facilitation have to be considered. The approach fosters conservation conflict solution. The results could help protected area managers to further develop a local process. The experiment empowered stakeholders and resulted in case-specific suggestions, backed up by adaptive co-management literature. Research should focus on bridging knowledge between case studies as well as between politics, management, stakeholders, and scientists and on further examining stakeholders' capabilities to develop adaptive co-management approaches. Elsevier 2018-11-02 /pmc/articles/PMC6218403/ /pubmed/30417152 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00890 Text en © 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Ehrhart, Stefan
Schraml, Ulrich
Adaptive co-management of conservation conflicts – An interactional experiment in the context of German national parks
title Adaptive co-management of conservation conflicts – An interactional experiment in the context of German national parks
title_full Adaptive co-management of conservation conflicts – An interactional experiment in the context of German national parks
title_fullStr Adaptive co-management of conservation conflicts – An interactional experiment in the context of German national parks
title_full_unstemmed Adaptive co-management of conservation conflicts – An interactional experiment in the context of German national parks
title_short Adaptive co-management of conservation conflicts – An interactional experiment in the context of German national parks
title_sort adaptive co-management of conservation conflicts – an interactional experiment in the context of german national parks
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6218403/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30417152
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00890
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