Wengki Ariando, ,. I. W. Veda Santiaji, N. Arunotai
{"title":"The Transition of Co-management Practices in a Marine Protected Area: A View from the Bajau Seafaring Nomadic Community in Indonesia","authors":"Wengki Ariando, ,. I. W. Veda Santiaji, N. Arunotai","doi":"10.53550/eec.2023.v29i01.003","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Customary communities with nature-based livelihoods have ways of knowing and living with their environment that they are best situated to manage. One example of such a group that lives in coastal and small island areas is the semi-nomadic Bajau people. At present, most of them have been sedentary in coastal areas and several Marine Protected Areas (MPA) such as Wakatobi National Park (WNP). They are rarely incorporated into the MPA management system. This research aims to investigate the transitional pattern of co-management in MPA from the view of the Bajau as a maritime-oriented people. This ethnographic study was carried out in five Bajau villages in WNP, Southeast Sulawesi, Indonesia. Interviews and participatory mapping were employed as research methods among related stakeholders to explore the many perspectives on these issues. WNP is starting to put the concept of co-management into practice, yet they face several challenges. However, Bajau communities there face cultural degradation and institutional complexities in inter- and intragroup relations, especially in promoting coastal and marine management. The documented pillars of the Bajau community indicate socio-ecological constraints on their involvement in the co-management transition of WNP. Administration, governance, sustainable resource management, capacity building, locality, and other issues can be addressed via a participatory model, but there will be difficulties to resolve on many levels for this model to prove optimally effective. To justify the need for WNP, Bajau sacred areas as part of traditional ecological knowledge have the prospect of being incorporated into marine co-management schemes.","PeriodicalId":11458,"journal":{"name":"Ecology, Environment and Conservation","volume":"9 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Ecology, Environment and Conservation","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.53550/eec.2023.v29i01.003","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"Environmental Science","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Customary communities with nature-based livelihoods have ways of knowing and living with their environment that they are best situated to manage. One example of such a group that lives in coastal and small island areas is the semi-nomadic Bajau people. At present, most of them have been sedentary in coastal areas and several Marine Protected Areas (MPA) such as Wakatobi National Park (WNP). They are rarely incorporated into the MPA management system. This research aims to investigate the transitional pattern of co-management in MPA from the view of the Bajau as a maritime-oriented people. This ethnographic study was carried out in five Bajau villages in WNP, Southeast Sulawesi, Indonesia. Interviews and participatory mapping were employed as research methods among related stakeholders to explore the many perspectives on these issues. WNP is starting to put the concept of co-management into practice, yet they face several challenges. However, Bajau communities there face cultural degradation and institutional complexities in inter- and intragroup relations, especially in promoting coastal and marine management. The documented pillars of the Bajau community indicate socio-ecological constraints on their involvement in the co-management transition of WNP. Administration, governance, sustainable resource management, capacity building, locality, and other issues can be addressed via a participatory model, but there will be difficulties to resolve on many levels for this model to prove optimally effective. To justify the need for WNP, Bajau sacred areas as part of traditional ecological knowledge have the prospect of being incorporated into marine co-management schemes.
以自然为基础的习惯社区有办法了解他们最适合管理的环境并与之共存。生活在沿海和小岛屿地区的这种群体的一个例子是半游牧的巴夭人。目前,它们大多定居在沿海地区和Wakatobi National Park (WNP)等几个海洋保护区(MPA)。它们很少被纳入MPA管理体系。本研究旨在以巴夭族为视角,探讨海洋保护区共同管理模式的变迁。这项民族志研究是在印度尼西亚苏拉威西岛东南部WNP的五个巴瑶村进行的。访谈和参与式绘图作为研究方法,在相关利益相关者之间探讨这些问题的许多观点。WNP正开始将共同管理的概念付诸实践,但他们面临着一些挑战。然而,那里的巴夭社区在群体间和群体内部关系中,特别是在促进沿海和海洋管理方面,面临着文化退化和体制复杂性。记录在案的巴夭社区支柱表明,他们参与西北国家公园共同管理过渡的社会生态限制。行政管理、治理、可持续资源管理、能力建设、地方和其他问题可以通过参与式模式来解决,但要证明这种模式的最佳效果,在许多层面上都有困难。为了证明建立保护区的必要性,作为传统生态知识的一部分,巴夭族圣地有可能被纳入海洋共同管理计划。
期刊介绍:
Published Quarterly Since 1995. Ecology, Environment and Conservation is published in March, June, September and December every year. ECOLOGY, ENVIRONMENT AND CONSERVATION is one of the leading International environmental journal. It is widely subsribed in India and abroad by Institutions and Individuals in education and research as well as by Industries, Govt. Departments and Research Institutes.