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来源类型 | Articles |
规范类型 | 论文 |
Assessing long-term management options for the villages in the Korup National Park: an evaluation of all options | |
Nhantumbo, I.; Monela, G.C.; Kowero, G. | |
发表日期 | 2003 |
出版者 | Cooperation Cameroun/Union Europeenne, WWF, CIFOR, Yaounde, Cameroon |
出版年 | 2003 |
页码 | 77p. |
语种 | 英语 |
摘要 | This study assesses the social, economical, ecological, political, legal, and institutional implications of options related to resettlement, boundary change, and enclave delineation for each of the five park villages.The study finds that attempting to resettle all the villages from the Korup National Park (KNP) may not be realistic or achievable. At the same time, the present status quo proves not being tenable. Bareka-Batanga is the village the most clearly prepared to resettle, and the least costly too. If the Bakoko group of villages cannot be resettled, it will need a comprehensive development conservation plan within a sustainable livelihood option here named enclave option. Three options exist for Erat and its twin village Ekon I: resettlement, with the financial cost scenarios particularly high; maintaining them where they are presently, that implies the much lower short-term financial cost; changing of the parks boundary.The economic analysis finds that under the original assumptions of the Korup project, resettling the villages remains a preferred option for long-term economic benefits. But slight changes into these assumptions significantly reduce forecasted benefits. By contrast, in the short term, the financial costs of resettlement are much higher than other options. The ecological assessment finds that people in the KNP are traditional forest-farmers, with almost 1/12th of the park already domesticated. At the same time, these communities depend vitally on the whole range of environmental services provided by the primary forest. In contrast, the study does not find evidence that hunting, fishing, or gathering by park villagers constitutes, as such, a threat to the sustainability of the wildlife or the ecosystems. The sociological analysis finds that communities perceptions of the KNP are dominated by the sentiment that they have been deceived and abandoned. Parts of these communities would still like to be resettled, other want to stop all talks of resettlement and just divide up the forest between them and the Korup project. Legal alternatives to the resettlement such as degazettment of part of the KNP to allow for certain villages to stay where they are while exercising freely their activities; the adaptation of the management plan, with the justification that such enclaves fall within the fundamental objectives of the management of the park; and a special regulatory amendment, by Decree of the Prime Minister or by ordinance of the President of the Republic with regulatory power. |
主题 | national parks ; protected areas ; management ; socioeconomics ; resettlement ; villages ; development plans ; projects |
区域 | Cameroon |
URL | https://www.cifor.org/library/1398/ |
来源智库 | Center for International Forestry Research (Indonesia) |
资源类型 | 智库出版物 |
条目标识符 | http://119.78.100.153/handle/2XGU8XDN/90455 |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Nhantumbo, I.,Monela, G.C.,Kowero, G.. Assessing long-term management options for the villages in the Korup National Park: an evaluation of all options. 2003. |
条目包含的文件 | 条目无相关文件。 |
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