Biodiversity Conservation, Affluence and Poverty: Mismatched Costs and Benefits and Efforts to Remedy Them
Bibliography B0953
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| Auteur(s) | Wells, M. |
| Date | 1992 |
| Type de référence | article de journal |
| Nom de source | Ambio |
| Journal | Vol 21 No 3 |
| Pages | pp. 237-243 |
| Éditeur | Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences |
Résumé
Considerable progress has been made recently in identifying and measuring protected area economic costs and benefits in developing countries. This paper departs from this approach by concentrating not on the measurement of total economic costs and benefits from protected areas but on their distribution. Protected area benefits and costs are discussed at three separate spatial scales: local, national/regional, and global/transnational. The overall picture shows that economic benefits--although difficult to measure and varying from site to site--are limited on a local scale, increase somewhat on a regional/national level and then become potentially substantial on a transnational/global scale. The economic costs follow an opposite trend, from being locally significant, regionally and nationally moderate, and globally small. It is evident that there are few local incentives and very limited regional and national incentives for protected area establishment and management in developing countries.
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