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Urban and peri-urban forest area stakeholder identification, case study of ‘Bernāti’ and ‘Ogres Zilie kalni’ nature parks
2024
Kraukle, Ieva | Jūrmalis, Edgars | Stokmane, Ilze | Vugule, Kristīne
Stakeholders and involved parties are crucial in a proper management of forest areas, more so in nature park areas. Urban nature areas and more remote peri-urban areas have objectively the most complex management issues due to the potentially high density of visitors and a diverse range of stakeholders. Such areas can also be valuable nature conservation and biodiversity hotspots, further making stakeholder interactions more complex. In this research, we conduct stakeholder identification for two case study areas – an urban forest nature park and a peri-urban forest nature park, with the aim of developing detailed lists of involved parties, including both public and private entities. We identified three main blocks of stakeholders (regulatory, usage, management), and detailed each group and sub-group for the case study areas. Our main results and conclusions include the identification of minor differences particularly explained by geographical and socio-economic contexts for each of the areas, with the regulatory stakeholder group overlapping the most between the two areas. The potential use of such analysis can improve or develop cooperation between previously unobserved stakeholders, and in research contexts, allow for a greater input from various parties that could have been missed in a more detailed analysis of a research area.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Managing intellectual property and proprietary technology in agricultural research
2002
Cohen, Joel I. | Falconi, Cesar | Henson-Appolonio, R.V. | Komen, John | Salazar, Silvia
Collective action and vulnerability: Burial societies in rural Ethiopia
2010
CGIAR Program on Collective Action and Property Rights
Collective action has intrinsic value. Being part of a group and participating in meeting common objectives provide direct benefits to individuals. In addition, collective action has an instrumental value; it can help individuals, groups, and communities achieve common goals. In Ethiopia, a study found that one form of collective action, iddir, or burial societies, helped households in the study areas attenuate the impact of illness.
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