Abstract

AbstractIn this era of socially-oriented biodiversity conservation and resource management, practitioners and scholars all too often invoke unclear and imprecise claims of empowerment to describe changing relations between people and resources. Empowerment is an important indicator of conservation success and social transformation. Yet, when scholars and practitioners fail to adequately conceptualize empowerment, they run the risk of undermining the importance of local involvement and capacity building to achieve biodiversity conservation. Here we explore the many ways empowerment has been conceptualized in conservation. We root our commentary in the history of the use of empowerment in conservation from these diverse perspectives. We then present examples of different meanings, measurements and outcomes ascribed to empowerment. We conclude with suggestions for harnessing empowerment for the benefit of conservationists and communities alike. Because empowerment has the potential to improve resource management outcomes and local livelihoods, we recommend building an adaptive empowerment assessment framework to assist with its deployment where it is most needed. Although empowerment goals in conservation can guide practitioners and scholars to engage with communities in transparent, meaningful and lasting ways, conservation needs a critical approach that builds from an appreciation of the nuances underlying the purpose and power of empowerment for conservation.

Highlights

  • Social science and socially-oriented objectives have been integral to natural resource planning and management for decades (Western & Wright, ; Dressler et al, ).MICHAEL A

  • Diverse interpretations of empowerment reach all parts of conservation; empowerment is part of nearly everything social in conservation, at all scales from project development to policy implementation

  • It is incumbent on conservationists and managers to assess their own assumptions about empowerment, but to honestly and rigorously determine if empowerment is integral to their goals

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Summary

Introduction

Social science and socially-oriented objectives have been integral to natural resource planning and management for decades (Western & Wright, ; Dressler et al, ).MICHAEL A. Keywords Biodiversity conservation, community, empowerment, natural resource management, participatory conservation, power The de facto strategy for empowerment emphasized communities as target social groups for empowerment through re-establishing their rights to sustainably use their natural resources.

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