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What You Know is Who You Know? Communication Patterns Among Resource Users as a Prerequisite for Co-management Ecology and Society
Crona, Beatrice; Dept. of Systems Ecology, Stockholm University; beatrice@system.ecology.su.se.
The social networks is one factor determining the flow of information within communities and as such may be important in determining successful implementation of community based management. We mapped the social network used for communication of knowledge and information related to natural resource extraction among villagers in a coastal seascape in Kenya. We further identified subgroups and examined their interrelations while measuring to what extent personal attributes such as occupation can explain observed group structure. Finally, we compared the local ecological knowledge held by villagers of different occupations with the structure of the communication network to map how well this structure can explain distribution of ecological knowledge among them....
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Co-management; Communication patterns; East Africa; Ecological knowledge; Fisheries; Fishing gear; Social networks..
Ano: 2006
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Increased Market Integration, Value, and Ecological Knowledge of Tea Agroforests in the Akha Highlands of Southwest China Ecology and Society
Ahmed, Selena; New York Botanical Garden; selenaahmed@aol.com; Stepp, John R; University of Florida; stepp@ufl.edu; Toleno, Robban A. J.; University of British Columbia; robban@interchange.ubc.ca; Peters, Charles M; New York Botanical Garden; cpeters@nybg.org.
This study assesses the persistence and change of traditional land use patterns and ecological knowledge in response to expanded commercialization of tea (Camellia sinensis var. assamica (L.) Kuntze Theaceae in an indigenous Akha (Hani) community in the midlevel montane forests of southwest Yunnan, China. Surveys were conducted in 2005 and 2008, over a period corresponding to a regional tea market boom and bust cycle, to compare the valuation smallholders attribute to land use types and to determine the role that value systems play in shaping environmental behavior and knowledge. At the community level, increased market integration of tea agroforests is associated with reconfiguration of land use, intensified management, reorganization of labor structures,...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Ecological knowledge; Land use; Natural resource commercialization; Social networks; Tea (Camellia sinensis).
Ano: 2010
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Hybrid Knowledge: Place, Practice, and Knowing in a Volunteer Ecological Restoration Project Ecology and Society
Reid, Karen A; University of Melbourne; reidk@unimelb.edu.au; Williams, Kathryn J H; University of Melbourne; kjhw@unimelb.edu.au; Paine, Mark S; University of Melbourne; Dairy New Zealand; Mark.Paine@dairynz.co.nz.
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Community-based ecological restoration; Ecological knowledge; Ecological restoration practice; Place-based knowledge; Traditional ecological knowledge.
Ano: 2011
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