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NATIONAL PARKS (4) answer(s).
 
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ID:   096481


Internal borders as naturalized political instruments / Fife, Wayne   Journal Article
Fife, Wayne Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract This article explores how internal borders can become naturalized political instruments that are heavily implicated in the extension of state control over rural populations and rural landscapes. It shows how seemingly innocuous instruments such as national parks and hunting and sport fishing regulations can be utilized to create essentialist ecological arguments for the extension of class and urban-based centers of power. Specific examples of these forms of control are illustrated with material from island Newfoundland to show how neo-liberal agendas have been implemented in the name of ecological conservation. These processes create serious disruptions in the historic political ecology of rural areas and obfuscate the anti-ecological practices of contemporary capitalism and neo-liberal forms of government.
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2
ID:   125847


Life-cycle carbon footprint of Yosemite National Park / Villalba, Gara; Tarnay, Leland; Campbell, Elliott; Gabarrell, Xavier   Journal Article
Gabarrell, Xavier Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Like cities, many large national parks in the United States often include "urban" visitor and residential areas that mostly demand (rather than produce) energy and key urban materials. The U.S. National Park Service has committed to quantifying and reducing scopes 1 and 2 emissions by 35% and scope 3 emissions by 10% by 2020 for all parks. Current inventories however do not provide the specificity or granularity to evaluate solutions that address fundamental inefficiencies in these inventories. By quantifying and comparing the importance of different inventory sectors as well as upstream and downstream emissions in Yosemite National Park (YNP), this carbon footprint provides a case study and potential template for quantifying future emissions reductions, and for evaluating tradeoffs between them. Results indicate that visitor-related emissions comprise the largest fraction of the Yosemite carbon footprint, and that increases in annual visitation (3.43-3.90 million) coincide with and likely drive interannual increases in the magnitude of Yosemite's extended inventory (126,000-130,000 t CO2e). Given this, it is recommended that "per visitor" efficiency be used as a metric to track progress. In this respect, YNP has annually decreased kilograms of GHG emissions per visitor from 36.58 (2008) to 32.90 (2011). We discuss opportunities for reducing this measure further.
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3
ID:   148817


National parks in Iran and the evolution of people‒park relationships / Kavous Seyed-Emami ; Ashayeri, Sheyda   Journal Article
Kavous Seyed-Emami & Sheyda Ashayeri Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract In Iran, national parks were originally created to protect wildlife and natural expanses. Over time, the exigencies of handling conflict with the locals and a worldwide shift in management approaches from strict protection to newer participatory approaches led Iranian conservationists to adopt the discourse of participatory conservation. However, serious institutional and attitudinal obstacles have prevented policy makers and officials from developing good relations with local communities, making it difficult to serve the interests of conservation or accommodate tourists. Based on interviews with past and present officials of the Department of the Environment of Iran and other field observers, this paper discusses approaches to conservation that reconcile the requirements of conservation with the needs of the people who benefit from reserves.
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4
ID:   140241


Political contestation, resource control and conservation in an era of decentralisation at Indonesia's Kerinci Seblat national p / Bettinger, Keith Andrew   Article
Bettinger, Keith Andrew Article
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Summary/Abstract Since the fall of long-time strongman Suharto and his authoritarian ‘New Order’ government in 1998, Indonesia has embarked upon a series of decentralisation and democratisation reforms. This new era of decentralised politics has come to be known as Reformasi and has significantly altered the political landscape of the archipelago as national and subnational levels of administration continue to contest the balance of power. Indonesia's national parks, which remain under the authority of the national government, have become arenas for negotiated encounters between local resource users, aspiring district elites and the national government. This essay explores three legacies of incomplete and unfinished decentralisation as they related to national-park-based conservation, using Sumatra's Kerinci Seblat National Park as a case study.
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