Abstract

Co-management is an increasinglyused tool in natural resource management around the world, in situations where the protection of natural resources has to ensure the livelihoods of local people who have traditionally relied upon these resources. It is a mechanism of sharing power in decision-making and sharing the benefits of natural resources between stakeholders (usually governments and local communities). In Vietnam, several governmental pilot projects on comanagement of PAs were launched over the past decade, with the purpose of eventually scaling up as a national policy. Nationwide, co-management initiatives have been implemented for protected areas (PAs). Therefore, a full assessment of the PAs co-management paradigm is needed. This paper aims to increase the understaing of the ''state-of-the-art" of the management that exist within PAs and to direct attention to the issues associated with property rights in conservation. It assesses the comanagement of PAs in terms of concepts, practices and implications that relate to indigenous peoples and community land and resource rights. The paper begins with a theoretical discussion about comanagement of PAs and property rights. Next, it analyzes a wide range of biodiversity-rich countries that have different time schedules for applying comanagement in PAs. The analysis also focusses on various types of PAs such as forests, game reserves, pastureland reserves, marine PAs, etc. It then encompasses experienced cases of community based forest management in Vietnam that may be applicable to co-managed PAs. This paper reveals that co-management could be an effective tool for PAs management as long as the property rights of local communities and their members are defined clearly and satisfactorily. Among them, land ownership/land-use rights have the most influence on the nature of the co-management agreements. The co-management of PAs officially acknowledges the rights of locals who live in and around forests, to enter, use and manage PAs. These management rights of communities are collective rights rather than individual rights, while ultimately management rights belong to governments. Governments retain the rights to control forest resources; to make decisions about forest products with high value; and to approve policies related to the PA management plan, exploitation license, development of forest management guidelines. In conclusion, governments usually do not empower local communities regarding their exclusion and alienation rights.

Highlights

  • This paper reveals that co-management could be an effective tool for

  • Co-management has been developing in places where the protection of natural resources (NRs) has to be reconciled with the livelihoods of local people who have traditionally relied upon these resources

  • The comanaged protected areas (PAs) are defined by International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as Government-designated protected area where decision making power, responsibility and accountability are shared between governmental agencies and other stakeholders, in particular the indigenous peoples and local and mobile communities that depend on that area culturally and/or for their livelihoods [1] (p.6)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Co-management has been developing in places where the protection of natural resources (NRs) has to be reconciled with the livelihoods of local people who have traditionally relied upon these resources. According to this definition, while traditional natural resource management systems are mostly subsistence-oriented, CM of NRs is based on agro-industrial-market systems. According to Borrini-Feyerabend et al [1], CM of PAs plays a critical role in PAs conservation They state that communities (Indigenous Peoples and local communities) are the oldest and the most. The process of nationalization was in transition, leading to severe conflicts between traditional natural resource management (community-based) and modern (legal) systems. The restoration tries to combine biodiversity conservation initiatives instead of the original status quo of indigenous common property rights. This is the only opportunity for the governments and communities to build a sustainable and effective conservation common ground. 39 1 1, 2018 necessary to proceed to an analysis and a synthesis of the concept and its worldwide practices before scaling up this national policy in Vietnam

METHODOLOGY
TOWARDS THE CONCEPT OF PROPERTY RIGHTS OF NRS
PROPERTY RIGHTS IN CO-MANAGED PAS
Findings
CONCLUSION
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