2021
DOI: 10.1007/s00267-021-01504-8
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Toward Inclusive Landscape Governance in Contested Landscapes: Exploring the Contribution of Participatory Tools in the Upper Suriname River Basin

Abstract: Nowadays, tropical forest landscapes are commonly characterized by a multitude of interacting institutions and actors with competing land-use interests. In these settings, indigenous and tribal communities are often marginalized in landscape-level decision making. Inclusive landscape governance inherently integrates diverse knowledge systems, including those of indigenous and tribal communities. Increasingly, geo-information tools are recognized as appropriate tools to integrate diverse interests and legitimiz… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(13 citation statements)
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References 74 publications
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“…This is true of much of the literature on integrated landscape approaches (Minang et al 2014;Freeman et al 2015;Hart et al 2015;García-Martín et al 2016;Reed et al 2020a) as well as other contributions to this special issue (e.g., Asubonteng et al 2021;Djenontin et al. 2021;Best et al 2021;Shantiko et al 2021).…”
Section: Integrated and Inclusive Landscape Governancementioning
confidence: 88%
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“…This is true of much of the literature on integrated landscape approaches (Minang et al 2014;Freeman et al 2015;Hart et al 2015;García-Martín et al 2016;Reed et al 2020a) as well as other contributions to this special issue (e.g., Asubonteng et al 2021;Djenontin et al. 2021;Best et al 2021;Shantiko et al 2021).…”
Section: Integrated and Inclusive Landscape Governancementioning
confidence: 88%
“…• Continual monitoring. The potential of participatory spatial tools to monitor how the allocation of land and resource use and rights came into being (Shantiko et al 2021) and how current trends shape (or interventions can change) transformations in the likely future (Asubonteng et al 2021, Best et al 2021) should be further developed. There is a need to go beyond 'oneshot' processes and turn 'an experience of the future into a culture of the future' (Shantiko et al 2021) through continued monitoring of landscape change.…”
Section: Participatory Spatial Toolsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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