N. Dudley, M. Hockings, S. Stolton, T. Amend, R. Badola, M. Bianco, N. Chettri, C. Cook, J. Day, P. Dearden, M. Edwards, P. Ferraro, W. Foden, R. Gambino, K. Gaston, N. Hayward, V. Hickey, Jason Irving, Bruce Jeffries, A. Karapetyan, M. Kettunen, L. Laestadius, D. Laffoley, D. Lham, G. Lichtenstein, John Makombo, N. Marshall, M. McGeoch, D. Nguyen, Sandra Nogué, M. Paxton, M. Rao, R. Reichelt, Jorge Rivas, D. Roux, C. Rutte, K. Schreckenberg, A. Sovinc, Svetlana Sutyrina, A. Utomo, D. Vallauri, P. Vedeld, B. Verschuuren, J. Waithaka, S. Woodley, C. Wyborn, Yan Zhang
{"title":"Priorities for protected area research","authors":"N. Dudley, M. Hockings, S. Stolton, T. Amend, R. Badola, M. Bianco, N. Chettri, C. Cook, J. Day, P. Dearden, M. Edwards, P. Ferraro, W. Foden, R. Gambino, K. Gaston, N. Hayward, V. Hickey, Jason Irving, Bruce Jeffries, A. Karapetyan, M. Kettunen, L. Laestadius, D. Laffoley, D. Lham, G. Lichtenstein, John Makombo, N. Marshall, M. McGeoch, D. Nguyen, Sandra Nogué, M. Paxton, M. Rao, R. Reichelt, Jorge Rivas, D. Roux, C. Rutte, K. Schreckenberg, A. Sovinc, Svetlana Sutyrina, A. Utomo, D. Vallauri, P. Vedeld, B. Verschuuren, J. Waithaka, S. Woodley, C. Wyborn, Yan Zhang","doi":"10.2305/IUCN.CH.2018.PARKS-24-1ND.EN","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"A hundred research priorities of critical importance to protected area management were identified by a targeted survey of conservation professionals; half researchers and half practitioners. Respondents were selected to represent a range of disciplines, every continent except Antarctica and roughly equal numbers of men and women. The results analysed thematically and grouped as potential research topics as by both practitioners and researchers. Priority research gaps reveal a high interest to demonstrate the role of protected areas within a broader discussion about sustainable futures and if and how protected areas can address a range of conservation and socio-economic challenges effectively. The paper lists the hundred priorities structured under broad headings of management, ecology, governance and social (including political and economic issues) and helps contribute to setting future research agendas.","PeriodicalId":37571,"journal":{"name":"Parks","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"15","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Parks","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.CH.2018.PARKS-24-1ND.EN","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"Environmental Science","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 15
Abstract
A hundred research priorities of critical importance to protected area management were identified by a targeted survey of conservation professionals; half researchers and half practitioners. Respondents were selected to represent a range of disciplines, every continent except Antarctica and roughly equal numbers of men and women. The results analysed thematically and grouped as potential research topics as by both practitioners and researchers. Priority research gaps reveal a high interest to demonstrate the role of protected areas within a broader discussion about sustainable futures and if and how protected areas can address a range of conservation and socio-economic challenges effectively. The paper lists the hundred priorities structured under broad headings of management, ecology, governance and social (including political and economic issues) and helps contribute to setting future research agendas.
ParksEnvironmental Science-Nature and Landscape Conservation
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍:
We aim for PARKS to be a rigorous, challenging publication with high academic credibility and standing. But at the same time the journal is and should remain primarily a resource for people actively involved in establishing and managing protected areas, under any management category or governance type. We aim for the majority of papers accepted to include practical management information. We also work hard to include authors who are involved in management but do not usually find the time to report the results of their research and experience to a wider audience. We welcome submissions from people whose written English is imperfect as long as they have interesting research to report, backed up by firm evidence, and are happy to work with authors to develop papers for the journal. PARKS is published with the aim of strengthening international collaboration in protected area development and management by: • promoting understanding of the values and benefits derived from protected areas to governments, communities, visitors, business etc; • ensuring that protected areas fulfil their primary role in nature conservation while addressing critical issues such as ecologically sustainable development, social justice and climate change adaptation and mitigation; • serving as a leading global forum for the exchange of information on issues relating to protected areas, especially learning from case studies of applied ideas; • publishing articles reporting on recent applied research that is relevant to protected area management; • changing and improving protected area management, policy environment and socio-economic benefits through use of information provided in the journal; and • promoting IUCN’s work on protected areas.