Poverty and Conservation .info

compass logo with points North-South, Conservation-Development

the information portal of the Poverty and Conservation Learning Group, providing all
project documentation, meeting notes, and hosting of the four PCLG web databases

Affirming New Directions in Planning Theory: Comanagement of Protected Areas

Bibliography B1022
[edit]

Author(s)Lane, M.B.
Date2001
Reference typeJournal Article
Source nameSociety & Natural Resources
JournalVol 14 No 8
Pagespp. 657-671
PublisherTaylor and Francis

Summary
In recent years the conservation management literature has seen many calls for comanagement of parks and protected areas. The rationale for this approach to protected area management has come from the experience of park managers struggling to integrate the protected area with the socioeconomic fabric of the surrounding region. This rich experience informs calls for comanagement. A theoretical rationale for and explanation of comanagement, however, have been slow in coming. This article considers the trajectory of change in planning theory over the past 50 years and demonstrates that planning theorists have converged on similar ground to managers of protected areas. Developing cooperative relationships with local stakeholders and sharing the burden of management responsibilities have emerged as a potential new paradigm in natural resource planning. Protected areas therefore provide a context in which many of the ideas and concepts, much debated among scholars of planning, have been empirically tested.

Themes
Protected areas

Available from
Taylor & Francis Journals (UK)
Phone: +44 (0)20 7017 6000
Email: beverley.acreman@tandf.co.uk