Abstract

This introduction provides a review of articles published in the special section on community conservation in the Wallacea region. As editors to the special section, we worked with contributors over a series of workshops to reflexively identify challenges to conducting research on community and conservation in this important and often overlooked region. The challenges are attributable to the dynamism and remoteness of the region, as well as its peripheral position relative to the center of government in Indonesia. We begin this article by making the case for a concerted field of study for the Wallacea region. Next, we draw on empirical research and continued engagement from across Wallacea to propose a framework that helps make better sense of the often perplexing trends involving communities and conservation in the region. We call the framework ASLi, which addresses the key institutions that negotiate conservation and development, including Adat and adaptive local institutions and the State. We situate these institutions within the dimensions of Livelihoods and their relations with natural resources. In testing out the framework with research groups and practitioners from across the region, we found that each of the aspects of the framework are fundamental for better understanding and facilitating policy discussions involving communities and conservation. In the second part of the article we shift our attention to assessing the empirical contributions from the special section. The empirical examples include eight articles from across the provinces of Sulawesi, East Nusa Tenggara, Maluku, and North Maluku. The issues range from topics that include: illegal species trade; human environment relations around charismatic species (e.g. komodo-community relations); watersheds, lakes, and landscapes; ecotourism; policy analysis; conservation management and planning; and, community participation and collaborative governance. There is much that remains misunderstood and misinterpreted about the Wallacea region. This initial set of consolidated and rich empirical material, combined with

Highlights

  • This special section consists of work by a research group with longstanding interest and engagement in communities and conservation in a unique and understudied region -- the Wallacea region

  • If they extend into the realm of local forms of decision-making powers, we believe such a framing needs to be a central component for examining issues of community conservation in the Wallacea region

  • Though approaches can take on many forms, we propose a set of guiding questions to better prepare restructure to more systematically think about the key issues they might be looking for as they examine issues of adat and the formation of adaptive local institutions relative to community conservation

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Summary

Introduction

This special section consists of work by a research group with longstanding interest and engagement in communities and conservation in a unique and understudied region -- the Wallacea region. Historical analyses of Wallacea often focus on the role of the region as a coveted trading post for lucrative commodities that shaped its colonial past, or are in the tradition of Wallace, focused on the unique biogeography, and quantity and dispersal of species types (Bini et al, 2006) Another area of research has focused on the cultural diversity of the region, but usually specific to the linguistic elements of fragmentation across numerous islands (Schapper, 2015). We turn to the three elements we believe are fundamental to any research framework seeking to study the Wallacea region

The ASLi framework: A three-part heuristic for research in Wallacea
Adat and adaptive local institutions
The state in Wallacea
Studying the Institutions
Studying Livelihoods
Communities and species
Conservation and institutions
Emerging issues on community conservation in Wallacea
Conclusions
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