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Catalyzing success in community‐based conservation
Author(s) -
Fariss Brandie,
DeMello Nicole,
Powlen Kathryn A.,
Latimer Christopher E.,
Masuda Yuta,
Kennedy Christina M.
Publication year - 2023
Publication title -
conservation biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.2
H-Index - 222
eISSN - 1523-1739
pISSN - 0888-8892
DOI - 10.1111/cobi.13973
Subject(s) - indigenous , corporate governance , diversification (marketing strategy) , political science , geography , community based conservation , welfare economics , environmental resource management , business , environmental planning , economics , ecology , marketing , finance , biology
Efforts to devolve rights and engage Indigenous Peoples and local communities in conservation have increased the demand for evidence of the efficacy of community‐based conservation (CBC) and insights into what enables its success. We examined the human well‐being and environmental outcomes of a diverse set of 128 CBC projects. Over 80% of CBC projects had some positive human well‐being or environmental outcomes, although just 32% achieved positive outcomes for both (i.e., combined success). We coded 57 total national‐, community‐, and project‐level variables and controls from this set, performed random forest classification to identify the variables most important to combined success, and calculated accumulated local effects to describe their individual influence on the probability of achieving it. The best predictors of combined success were 17 variables suggestive of various recommendations and opportunities for conservation practitioners related to national contexts, community characteristics, and the implementation of various strategies and interventions informed by existing CBC frameworks. Specifically, CBC projects had higher probabilities of combined success when they occurred in national contexts supportive of local governance, confronted challenges to collective action, promoted economic diversification, and invested in various capacity‐building efforts. Our results provide important insights into how to encourage greater success in CBC.

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