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Traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) is a critical global resource that may be eroding amid social and environmental change. Here, we present data on local perceptions of TEK change from three communities on Malekula Island in Vanuatu. Utilizing a structured interview (n = 120), we find a common perception of TEK loss. Participants defined two key periods of TEK erosion (roughly 1940–1960 and 1980–present), and noted that TEK decline was driven both external (e.g., church) and internal (e.g., shifting values) processes. Erosion was perceived to more comprehensive in the worldview domain than in aspects of ethnobiological knowledge and practice. These data indicate the perceived fragility of TEK systems and the complexity of TEK change. TEK systems are critical to natural resource management, and data such as these will assist in designing nuanced responses to the ongoing loss of cultural knowledge and practice. 相似文献
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Maëlle Calandra 《Disasters》2023,47(1):3-22
Cyclone Pam swept through the archipelago of Vanuatu on 13–14 March 2015, with wind speeds exceeding those recorded anywhere in the South Pacific since the 1980s. Southern and central parts of the country were particularly affected. Material damage on Tongoa, one of the most afflicted islands, was extensive, but no deaths were reported. During the storm, villagers found shelter in their kitchen, in what is considered locally as a ‘lifeboat’. The aftermath was managed and mitigated by international aid organisations. On Tongoa, this included a ‘Shelter Cluster’ programme, under which villagers were given house rebuilding kits. Elaborating upon extensive ethnographic investigations on site between 2011 and 2018, this paper explores and reveals the ways in which this aid generated confusion among the local population. In a larger context of regular disasters triggered by natural hazards, locals have found endogenous ways of dealing with such extreme climatic events, for the most part without any external assistance. 相似文献
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C. Y. BARTLETT C. MANUA J. CINNER S. SUTTON R. JIMMY R. SOUTH J. NILSSON J. RAINA 《Conservation biology》2009,23(6):1475-1484
Abstract: In many areas of the developing world, the establishment of permanent marine reserves is inhibited by cultural norms or socioeconomic pressures. Community conserved areas that are periodically harvested are increasingly being implemented as fisheries management tools, but few researchers have empirically compared them with permanently closed reserves. We used a hierarchal control‐impact experimental design to compare the abundance and biomass of reef fishes, invertebrates, and substrate composition in periodically harvested and permanent reserves and in openly fished (control sites) of the South Pacific island country of Vanuatu. Fished species had significantly higher biomass in periodically harvested reserves than in adjacent openly fished areas. We did not detect differences in substratum composition between permanent reserves and openly fished areas or between permanent reserves and periodically harvested reserves. Giant clams (tridacnids) and top shells (Trochus niloticus) were vulnerable to periodic harvest, and we suggest that for adequate management of these species, periodically harvested community conservation areas be used in conjunction with other management strategies. Periodic harvest within reserves is an example of adaptive and flexible management that may meet conservation goals and that is suited to the social, economic, and cultural contexts of many coastal communities in the developing world. 相似文献
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J. Woods Sarah Hemstock William Burnyeat 《Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change》2006,11(2):461-492
Read, Sims and Adams (2001) detailed a case study for bio-energy implementation in a notional small Pacific Island and elaborated
a theoretical model for assessing and simulating the socio-economic impacts of a particular bio-energy system designed to
produce an exportable liquid fuel along with rural electricity supplies. An important conclusion was that there is no silver-bullet
‘one size fits all’ bio-energy system suited to all situations. Moreover, a system appropriate at one place and time may become
obsolete with exogenous technological advance and/or as a community advances down its own development pathway. In order to
understand how these issues interact in practice, a selected set of implementation projects is reviewed highlighting scale,
capacity, community, technology, governmental policy and the concept of critical mass, as factors that are central to the
successful development of the bioenergy sector. Through this evaluation, it is shown that: 1.A significant biomass supply
resource base often exists locally in the form of agricultural and forestry residues on which modern bioenergy programmes
could be initiated. The use of biomass energy flow charts are an important tool for evaluating the potential of local and
national resources. 2. Without an integrated multi-disciplinary, multi-sector and whole-systems approach to the implementation
of bioenergy schemes, long term success is likely to remain elusive. 3. There is a requirement at the national level for a
coordinated approach with strong policy signals that overcome perverse and practical obstacles. 相似文献
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