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This book demonstrates that trade-offs can be very important for
conservationists. Its various chapters show how and why trade-offs
are made, and why conservationists need to think very hard about
what, if anything, to do about them. The book argues that
conservationists must carefully weigh up, and be explicit about,
the trade-offs that they make every day in deciding what to save.
Key Features:
Discusses the wider non-biological issues that surround making
decisions about which species and biogeographic areas to prioritise
for conservation
Focuses on questions such as: What are these wider issues that
are influencing the decisions we make? What factors need to be
included in our assessment of trade-offs? What package of
information and issues do managers need to consider in making a
rational decision? Who should make such decisions?
Part of the Conservation Science and Practice book
series
This volume is of interest to policy-makers, researchers,
practitioners and postgraduate students who are concerned about
making decisions that include recognition of trade-offs in
conservation planning.
Auteur
Nigel Leader-Williams became Director of Conservation
Leadership, based in the Department of Geography at the University
of Cambridge, in 2009. Previously he was Director of the Durrell
Institute of Conservation and Ecology at the University of Kent.
His research focuses on sustainable resource use and human-wildlife
conflict.
William M. Adams is Moran Professor of Conservation and
Development. He is based in the Department of Geography at the
University of Cambridge, where he has taught since 1984. His
research focuses on the social dimensions of conservation in Africa
and the UK. He is a Trustee of Fauna and Flora International.
Robert J. Smith is a Research Fellow at the Durrell
Institute of Conservation and Ecology at the University of Kent.
His research interests include protected area network design,
conservation and corruption, and the influence of marketing in
conservation.
Résumé
This book demonstrates that trade-offs can be very important for conservationists. Its various chapters show how and why trade-offs are made, and why conservationists need to think very hard about what, if anything, to do about them. The book argues that conservationists must carefully weigh up, and be explicit about, the trade-offs that they make every day in deciding what to save.
Key Features:
Contenu
Contributors.
Preface and Acknowledgments.
Introduction.
Current Approaches and Toolkits.
Prioritizing Trade-offs in Conservation (Kerrie A. Wilson,
Michael Bode, Hedley Grantham and Hugh P. Possingham).
Trade-offs in Identifying Global Conservation Priority Areas
(William Murdoch, Michael Bode, Jon Hoekstra, Peter Kareiva,
Steve Polasky, Hugh P. Possingham and Kerrie A. Wilson).
Trade-offs in Making Ecosystem Services and Human Well-being
Conservation Priorities (Rebecca L. Goldman, Gretchen C. Daily
and Peter Kareiva).
Defining and Measuring Success in Conservation (Valerie
Kapos, Andrea Manica, Rosalind Aveling, Philip Bubb, Peter Carey,
Abigail Entwistle, John Hopkins, Teresa Mulliken, Roger Safford,
Alison Stattersfield, Matthew J. Walpole and Andrew
Balmford).
Influence of Value Systems.
Conserving Invertebrates: How Many can be Saved, and How?
(Michael J. Samways).
Trade-offs between Animal Welfare and Conservation in Law and
Policy (Stuart R. Harrop).
Protection or Use: a Case of Nuanced Trade-offs? (Alison
M. Rosser and Nigel Leader-Williams).
Whose Value Counts? Trade-offs between Biodiversity
Conservation and Poverty Reduction (Dilys Roe and Matthew J.
Walpole).
The Power of Traditions in Conservation (Katherine M.
Homewood).
Economics and Governance.
Misaligned Incentives and Trade-offs in Allocating
Conservation Funding (Aaron Bruner, Eduard T. Niesten and
Richard E. Rice).
Marketing and Conservation: How to Lose Friends and
Influence People (Robert J. Smith, Diogo Veríssimo and
Douglas C. MacMillan).
Trade-offs between Conservation and Extractive Industries
(Manuel Pulgar-Vidal, Bruno Monteferri and Juan Luis
Dammert).
A Fighting Chance: can Conservation Create a Platform for
Peace within Cycles of Human Conflict? (Rosalind Aveling, Helen
Anthem and Annette Lanjouw).
Social and Institutional Constraints.
Trading-off 'Knowing' Versus 'Doing'
for Effective Conservation Planning (Andrew T. Knight and
Richard M. Cowling).
Path Dependence in Conservation (William M.
Adams).
Conservation Trade-offs and the Politics of Knowledge (J.
Peter Brosius).
Future Challenges.
Climatic Change and Conservation (Stephen G. Willis,
David G. Hole and Brain Huntley).
Drivers of Biodiversity Change (Georgina M.
Mace).
Another Entangled Bank: Making Conservation Trade-offs More
Explicit (Robert J. Smith, William M. Adams and Nigel
Leader-Williams).
Index.