scholarly journals Investigating the Role of the Local Community as Co-Managers of the Mount Cameroon National Park Conservation Project

Environments ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 36 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nvenakeng Awung ◽  
Rob Marchant
Author(s):  
N. Qwynne Lackey ◽  
Kelly Bricker

Concessioners play an important role in park and protected area management by providing visitor services. Historically, concessioners were criticized for their negative impacts on environmental sustainability. However, due to policy changes, technological advances, and shifting market demands, there is a need to reevaluate the role of concessioners in sustainable destination management in and around parks and protected areas. The purpose of this qualitative case study situated in Grand Teton National Park (GTNP), which was guided by social exchange theory, was to explore U.S. national park concessioners’ influence on sustainable development at the destination level from the perspective of National Park Service (NPS) staff, concessioners, and local community members. Sustainability was examined holistically as a multifaceted construct with integrated socioeconomic, cultural, and environmental dimensions. Twenty-three participants completed semistructured interviews. Researchers identified four thematic categories describing concessioners’ influence on sustainability; motivations and barriers to pursuing sustainability initiatives; and situational factors that facilitated concessioners’ sustainability actions. While participants commented on the negative environmental impacts of concessioners and their operations, these data suggest that concessioners were working individually and collaboratively to promote environmental, socioeconomic, and cultural sustainability in and around GTNP. Some concessioners were even described as leaders, testing and driving the development of innovative sustainability policies and practices. These actions were motivated, in part, by contractual obligations and profit generation. However, concessioners also had strong intangible motivators, such as intrinsic values and a strong sense of community, that drove their positive contributions to sustainability. Based on these data, we recommend that those involved in future theoretical and practical work with concessioners acknowledge the importance of both tangible and intangible motivators when attempting to promote higher levels of sustainability achievement and collaboration. This will become increasingly important as land management agencies continue to embrace strategies beyond the traditional “parks as islands” approach to management. Additionally, future work should explore more specifically the role of policy, conceptualizations of sustainability, and private industry sponsorship in promoting concessioners’ contributions to sustainability, especially in collaborative settings. This work is needed to understand if and how these observations generalize to other contexts.


Author(s):  
Habib Husnial Pardi

This article try to describe the role of Tuan guru Hasanain Djuani in environmental conservation project. As leader of  Pesantren Nurul Haramain, he does not merely focus on transfering religious knowledge theoritically in Pesantren, but he also engages with sosio-ecological issues practically. Since 2003, he begun his foresty project in environmental conservation and economic empowerment by involving his santries and local societies at desa Lembuak, Narmada, West Lombok. This research  uses a qualitative approach. Data collection originates from objects in the field, interviews with actors (tuan guru, santri, and  local  community), then is linked to solving a problem, both from a theoretical and practical point of view. This research found several things; first,  conservation project had succesfully reforested 36 hectare land. Second, Hasanain’s  environmental conservation projet motivated by religious values. Third, Tuan guru Hasanain use social media (facebook) as a tool to campaign his ecoda’wah agendas to the soceity.Tulisan ini mengeksplorasi proyek konservasi lingkungan tuan Guru Hasanain. Sebagai pemimpin pesantren ia tidak hanya fokus pada transfer ilmu keislaman secara teoritis di pesantre. pemberdayaan masyarakat berbasis pondok pesantren. Namun dia terlibat dalam isu krisis lingkungan. Sejak 2003, di telah memulai program penghijaun dan pemberdayaan bersama santri dan masyarakat sekitar di desa Lembuak, Naramada Lombok Barat. Penelitian ini menggunakan metode kualitatif dengan pendekatan studi kasus. Pengumpulan data menggunakan wawancara mendalam dan observasi secara langsung dan tidak lansung (kepada Tuan guru, Santri dan masyarakat). Kajian ini diawali dengan argumentasi bahwa tuan guru telah mengalami evolusi peran, yakni tidak hanya dikenal sebagai tokoh agama tradisional, akan tetapi juga merupakan aktivis sosial  dalam proyek konservasi lingkungan. Penelitian ini menemukan beberapa hal: pertama, proyek konservasi yang dipimpin Hasanain sukses menghijaukan 36 hektare lahan tandus. Kedua, konservasi lingkungan yang dilakukan Hasanain didorong dan motivasi olehnilai-nilai agama. Ketiga, tuan gru Hasanain memanfaatkan media sosial facebook sebagai instrumen ec-da’wah, dan tentu saja langkah itu cukup berpengaruh bagi pembentukan kesadaran masyarakat.


2020 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Vivienne Dunstan

McIntyre, in his seminal work on Scottish franchise courts, argues that these courts were in decline in this period, and of little relevance to their local population. 1 But was that really the case? This paper explores that question, using a particularly rich set of local court records. By analysing the functions and significance of one particular court it assesses the role of this one court within its local area, and considers whether it really was in decline at this time, or if it continued to perform a vital role in its local community. The period studied is the mid to late seventeenth century, a period of considerable upheaval in Scottish life, that has attracted considerable attention from scholars, though often less on the experiences of local communities and people.


Author(s):  
Taylor F Brinkman

During the past decade, forty-six professional sports venues were constructed in the United States, while only 16 expansion teams were created by the major sports leagues. Nearly two thirds of these newly built stadiums and arenas were funded with public tax revenues, despite substantial evidence showing no positive economic impact of new sports stadium construction on local communities. In reviewing the economic literature, this article investigates the role of professional sports organizations in the construction and public subsidization of new sports venues. Franchise relocation and public stadium subsidization is a direct result of the monopoly power of professional sports leagues, whose franchise owners extract large subsidies from their host communities by threatening to relocate to viable alternative locations. After explaining how the most common methods of stadium subsidization project a disproportionate allocation of the benefits and costs of hosting a professional team to local community interests, this article outlines several considerations for local policymakers who seek to reinvigorate public discussion of equity concerns in professional sports finance.


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