Abstract

International protected area (PA) management policies recognise the importance of respecting Indigenous rights. However, little research has been conducted to evaluate how these policies are being enforced. We evaluated whether Indigenous rights to access traditional food were being respected in La Amistad Biosphere Reserve, Costa Rica. By examining land management documents, we found that PA regulations have the potential to restrict traditional food access because these regulations ban shifting agriculture and heavily restrict hunting; these regulations do not address the harvest of edible plants. By working with Bribri people, we found multiple negative impacts that PAs had on: health, nutrition, passing on cultural teachings to youth, quality of life, cultural identity, social cohesion and bonding, as well as on the land and non-human beings. We propose three steps to better support food access in PAs in Costa Rica and elsewhere. First, a right to food framework should inform PA management regarding traditional food harvesting. Second, people require opportunities to define what harvesting activities are traditional and sustainable and these activities should be respected in PA management. Third, harvesting regulations need to be clearly communicated by land managers to resource users so people have the necessary information to exercise their rights to access food.

Highlights

  • Over 10 years ago, members of the biodiversity conservation community recommended including human rights on the conservation agenda

  • To interpret how protected area (PA) regulations were applied in the Talamanca Bribri Territory, we interviewed five people working for the multiple land management institutions that operate in Bajo Coen and in the Bribri Indigenous Territory (Table 2); this included: 1) the president and one other member of the Bajo Coen government; 2) the president and one past member of the Talamanca Bribri government ADITIBRI; and 3) the Administrator of the La Amistad Park, Caribbean Sector

  • The regulations outlined in this management plan apply to all of La Amistad Park as well as to the communities that live in the park’s buffer zone; this includes all of the communities in the Talamanca Bribri Indigenous Territory

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Summary

Introduction

Over 10 years ago, members of the biodiversity conservation community recommended including human rights on the conservation agenda This was recommended because many protected areas (PAs) have been established without adequate attention to, and respect for, Indigenous peoples’ rights to natural. Even when PAs have not displaced human populations, PAs have restricted Indigenous peoples’ ability to access natural resources (Ghimire 1994; Hitchcock et al 2011; Ibarra et al 2011; Jonas et al 2014). In response to the multiple human rights violations associated with PAs, a goal was set to manage all PAs in full compliance of Indigenous peoples’ rights by 2014 (main target 8, IUCN 2004)

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