Twenty five years of world heritage status: Show us the benefits!
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Mark Pepe, Ariki
Claire, Oiire
Cathy, Unga
Fleming, Christopher
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Abstract
In the Solomon Islands and around the Pacific there is commonly a disconnect between government priorities for economic development through resource extraction and community aspirations for local resource management, conservation, and alternative pathways to livelihoods development, which includes tourism. Nowhere is this disconnect more stark than in communities on Rennell Island, within the region's oldest inscribed World Heritage area. These communities have so far resisted extractive industry development but have not yet benefited from inscription. Alternative livelihood opportunities compatible with a conservation economy are a priority. Our research objective was to explore community aspirations and priorities. We used Q-methodology to reveal discourses associated with conservation, livelihoods generation, and drivers of well-being and then evaluated these aspirations in scenarios in a socio-ecological system. We revealed three factors, each aligned with conservation and tourism development with clear opposition to extractive industries. Key differences focussed on immediate personal circumstances, attachment to kastom, and food and water security. Our research points to clear support for the area's continued conservation and for livelihood pathways that might secure this but low capacity to pursue this. Notwithstanding, the communities' patience is wearing thin and there is growing cynicism about the role of World Heritage protection as a route towards livelihoods development.
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Journal of Environmental Management
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358
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© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Conservation and biodiversity
Cultural heritage management (incl. world heritage)
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Buckwell, A; Mark Pepe, A; Claire, O; Cathy, U; Fleming, C, Twenty five years of world heritage status: Show us the benefits!, Journal of Environmental Management, 2024, 358, pp. 120849