对土著土地和海洋管理的投资是否到位,是否能带来多重协同效益?

IF 1.1 4区 社会学 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Australasian Journal of Environmental Management Pub Date : 2020-07-02 DOI:10.1080/14486563.2020.1786861
P. Pert, R. Hill, C. Robinson, D. Jarvis, J. Davies
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引用次数: 20

摘要

摘要土著土地和海洋管理(ILSM)一直是澳大利亚和全球政府大规模投资的重点。除了环境效益之外,这些投资还可以带来一系列社会、文化和经济共同效益,与土著社区和政府在文化上适当的社会经济发展的目标相一致。尽管如此,关于这项投资的空间分布及其相关的共同利益在多大程度上解决了澳大利亚各地分布不均的社会经济劣势,却很少进行研究。本研究借鉴了澳大利亚ILSM计划,研究了2002-2012年间ILSM投资的空间和时间分布,并考虑了对相关共同利益分配的影响。对2600个保护项目的测绘和分析显示,在澳大利亚各地的750个离散地点,对ILSM项目的投资至少为4.62亿美元。对ILSM的投资有一半以上集中在澳大利亚北部,这些地区的贫困偏远和非常偏远,土著人口比例很高,土著土地所有权广泛。我们的研究表明,ILSM投资已成功地在空间上分布到对多种社会、经济、环境、健康和福祉共同利益结果有高度需求的地区。
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Is investment in Indigenous land and sea management going to the right places to provide multiple co-benefits?
ABSTRACT Indigenous land and sea management (ILSM) has been the focus of large government investment in Australia and globally. Beyond environmental benefits, such investments can deliver a suite of social, cultural and economic co-benefits, aligning with the objectives of Indigenous communities and of governments for culturally appropriate socio-economic development. Nevertheless, there have been very few studies done on the spatial distribution of this investment and the extent to which its associated co-benefits address socio-economic disadvantage, which is unevenly distributed across Australia. This study draws on Australian ILSM programmes to examine the spatial and temporal distribution of investment for ILSM between 2002–2012 and considers implications for the distribution of associated co-benefits. Mapping and analysis of 2600 conservation projects revealed that at least $462M of investment in ILSM projects had occurred at 750 discrete sites throughout Australia. More than half of this investment in ILSM has been concentrated in northern Australia, in disadvantaged remote and very remote areas where a high percentage of the population is Indigenous, and Indigenous land ownership extensive. Our research has shown that ILSM investment has successfully been spatially distributed to areas with high needs for multiple social, economic, environmental and health and well-being co-benefit outcomes.
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