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1. Project Details |
Author or Responsible Organization |
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APN - Administración de Parques Nacionales, Argentina |
Project Title |
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Mburucuya National Park and sustainable community development |
Date of Publication |
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Project Status |
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Completed |
Project Start Date |
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Project End Date |
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Countries |
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Argentina |
Regions |
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Funding Source |
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2. Background to Project |
Project Issue/Problem Statement |
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Mburucuya is a department in the province of Corrientes, in the northeast wetland region of the Republic of Argentina. The Mburucuya National Park and the areas surrounding it contain important cultural and natural resources.
Natural resources in the area are threatened by unsustainable agricultural practices, such as the use of herbicides which contaminate water supplies and poison native fauna and flora, and the loss or destruction of habitat.
Local communities in the areas surrounding the Mburucuya National Park have been experiencing reduced quality of life and well-being, as evidenced by an increase in child mortality due to malnutrition, and an increase in migration away from the area toward urban centers offering better employment opportunities. |
Project Description |
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The project sought to create basic conditions for conservation, while at the same time fostering capacities for economic development among the population and environment of the Mburucuya National Park.
The projects objectives were;
- To expand the capacity of local communities to carry out cultural and natural heritage assessment, and strengthening the criteria used for planning resource use and maintenance
- To work in a coordinated way with local communities in planning the social and economic development of these communities, in order to improve their quality of life, and minimise negative impacts on the environment
- To promote changes in social and environmental relationships towards a more rational, profitable and sustainable use of these resources
- To encourage different activities that promote the understandin and cultivation of local history, and in this way strengthen ties with local identity
- To create interactive links between neighbouring communities and the Mburuciya National Park, in order to achieve better protection for the area, and sustainable social and rural development in the areas surrounding the park
- To develop a training and capacity-building programme based on the interests, expectations, knowledge, and abilities of the various local communities
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Highlighted Aspects of Ecosystem Approach |
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The case study simultaneously addressed conservation, sustainable use, social development and economic development. The social and economic well being of the area depends significantly on the environmental condition of the area, including the National Park itself. The work was carried out in collaboration with a wide range of local organisations, including those concerned with tourism, education and culture and technological training. |
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3. Sectors and Biomes |
Sectors |
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Agriculture Forestry |
Biomes |
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Agricultural Biodiversity Forest Biodiversity Inland Waters Biodiversity |
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4. Tools and Approaches |
Tools and Approaches |
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Relevance Score |
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Further Information |
Public Participation |
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3-High |
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- Workshop based methods |
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3-High |
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- Community based methods |
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3-High |
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- Methods for stakeholder consultation |
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3-High |
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- Local community approaches |
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3-High |
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- Social analysis |
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2-Medium |
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- Conflict management methods |
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2-Medium |
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Education and Awareness |
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3-High |
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- Communication |
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2-Medium |
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- Education |
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3-High |
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- Networks |
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3-High |
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- Moral confrontation |
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1-Low |
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Management and Incentives |
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2-Medium |
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- Practical skills |
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2-Medium |
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- Conservation enterprises/Diversification |
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3-High |
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Data, Monitoring and Modelling |
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2-Medium |
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- Data collection |
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1-Low |
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- Monitoring methods |
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2-Medium |
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Protected Areas and Land Use Policy |
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3-High |
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- Protected/managed areas |
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3-High |
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- Land use policy |
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3-High |
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- Managed/protected species |
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3-High |
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- Restoration |
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2-Medium |
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- Ex-situ protection |
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1-Low |
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Cross-sectoral Research and Working |
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2-Medium |
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5. Issues |
Issues |
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Relevance Score |
Economics, Trade and Incentive Measures |
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2-Medium |
Ecosystem Approach |
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3-High |
Identification, Monitoring and Indicators |
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2-Medium |
Pollution |
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2-Medium |
Protected Areas / In-Situ Conservation |
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3-High |
Public Participation |
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3-High |
Scientific Assessment |
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2-Medium |
Sustainable Use of Biodiversity |
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3-High |
Tourism and Biodiversity |
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3-High |
Traditional Knowledge, Innovations and Practices - Article 8(j) |
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2-Medium |
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6. Ecosystem Approach |
Principles and Operational Guidance |
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Relevance Score |
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Reason (Only if NOT relevant) |
Principle 1: The objectives of management of land, water and living resources are a matter of societal choices |
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3-High |
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Principle 2: Management should be decentralized to the lowest appropriate level |
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3-High |
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Principle 3: Ecosystem managers should consider the effects (actual or potential) of their activities on adjacent and other ecosystems |
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2-Medium |
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Principle 4: Recognizing potential gains from management, there is usually a need to understand and manage the ecosystem in an economic context |
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3-High |
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Principle 5: Conservation of ecosystem structure and functioning, in order to maintain ecosystem services, should be a priority target of the ecosystem approach |
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3-High |
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Principle 6: Ecosystem must be managed within the limits of their functioning |
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3-High |
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Principle 7: The ecosystem approach should be undertaken at the appropriate spatial and temporal scales |
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2-Medium |
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Principle 8: Recognizing the varying temporal scales and lag-effects that characterize ecosystem processes, objectives for ecosystem management should be set for the long term |
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2-Medium |
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Principle 9: Management must recognize the change is inevitable |
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2-Medium |
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Principle 10: The ecosystem approach should seek the appropriate balance between, and integration of, conservation and use of biological diversity |
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3-High |
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Principle 11: The ecosystem approach should consider all forms of relevant information, including scientific and indigenous and local knowledge, innovations and practices |
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3-High |
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Principle 12: The ecosystem approach should involve all relevant sectors of society and scientific disciplines |
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3-High |
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Operational Guidance A: Focus on the relationships and processes within ecosystem |
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2-Medium |
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Operational Guidance B: Enhance benefit-sharing |
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2-Medium |
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Operational Guidance C: Use adaptive management practices |
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3-High |
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Operational Guidance D: Carry out management actions at the scale appropriate for the issue being addressed, with decentralization to lowest level, as appropriate |
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3-High |
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Operational Guidance E: Ensure intersectoral cooperation |
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3-High |
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7. Lessons Learned and the Outcomes |
Lessons Learned |
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Outcomes |
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Other Information |
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8. References |
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9. Contact Details |
Contact Person |
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Mr Alistair Taylor |
Job Title |
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Consultant |
Organization |
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Joint Nature Conservation Committee (JNCC) |
Address |
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Monkstone House, City Road, Peterborough, Cambridgeshire |
City |
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Cambridge |
Telephone |
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+44 7867 794214 |
E-mail Address |
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taylor_alistair@hotmail.com |
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