Abstract

Although protected areas (PAs) have become pivotal components in the pursuit of environmental sustainability, they have had mixed success in achieving environmental goals, in part due to internal factors such as governance design and insufficient ability to operate within, and connect to, wider social, economic, and institutional frameworks. A growing body of scholarship reveals that there are fundamental mismatches between rhetoric and practice in state-driven “participatory” conservation, and that state–community cooperation is extremely challenging. This study draws on data from qualitative research on institutions and interactions in conservation planning and management to examine factors influencing collaboration between Parks Canada and Nuu-chah-nulth communities adjacent to the Pacific Rim National Park Reserve. We consider the evolution of policies, institutional arrangements, state-community interactions, and socio-cultural and legal frameworks within which state-led conservation takes place to assess progress in multilevel cooperation. We found that despite differences in degrees of authority and decision-making power, and a land tenure framework that favors the state, there is a shift from domination toward negotiation in the interplay between the federal government and grassroots actors. That shift is linked to the recognition of First Nations’ ancestral tenure and custodianship, and the particularities of grassroots and state leadership. The findings suggest significant progress in sustaining the PA as a multilevel effort, and that cooperation in conservation helps all parties to build capacity for environmental stewardship beyond the PA and to fashion conservation institutions that are responsive to changing social–ecological conditions.

Highlights

  • In the face of global environmental challenges such as climate change and the loss of biological diversity (Díaz et al, 2019; Meehl et al, 2000; Webster et al, 2005), there is a growing recognition of the importance of environmental governance in general, and in particular, the role institutions and interactions across and within levels of social organization play in building capacity to address environmental change (Robinson & Berkes, 2011; Ward-Fear et al, 2019)

  • Through an examination of official governance frameworks and local-level governance dynamics at Pacific Rim National park officers (Park) Reserve on Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada, and in Nuu-chah-nulth First Nation1 communities within which the park is located, we elaborate on how institutions and institutional interactions influence the sustainability of the protected areas (PAs) and the larger social–ecological landscape

  • How are the new patterns of interplay among the federal government and First Nations regimes shaping PAs and environmental stewardship on Canada’s Vancouver Island west coast? What is the significance of different patterns of interplay and cooperative conservation for addressing the sustainability and health of natural and human communities connected to PAs?

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Summary

Introduction

The challenges associated with PAs include factors such as governance design and insufficient ability to operate within, and connect to, wider socioeconomic and institutional frameworks (Brandon et al, 1998; Christie & White, 2007; Duffy, 2006). These challenges have situated governance as one of the leading concerns in the study of PAs (Borrini-Feyerabend et al, 2007; Dudley et al, 1999; Smith, 2003). Through an examination of official governance frameworks and local-level governance dynamics at Pacific Rim National Park Reserve on Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada, and in Nuu-chah-nulth First Nation communities within which the park is located, we elaborate on how institutions and institutional interactions influence the sustainability of the PA and the larger social–ecological landscape

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