Where are all the people? A study on the integration of socio-economics in marine conservation planning

The Northwest Atlantic Marine Ecoregional Assessment, designed by The Nature Conservancy, is a marine spatial planning process which strives for an integrated management approach to marine conservation design. As ecosystem based management gains momentum, non-governmental organizations and federal a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Feldman, Lindsey
Other Authors: Orbach, Michael
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10161/973
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spelling ftdukeunivdsp:oai:localhost:10161/973 2023-11-12T04:23:27+01:00 Where are all the people? A study on the integration of socio-economics in marine conservation planning Feldman, Lindsey Orbach, Michael 2009-04-23T23:13:44Z 3315072 bytes application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10161/973 en_US eng https://hdl.handle.net/10161/973 socio-economics marine spatial planning marine ecosystem based management non-market valuation social impact assessment Master's project 2009 ftdukeunivdsp 2023-10-17T09:42:11Z The Northwest Atlantic Marine Ecoregional Assessment, designed by The Nature Conservancy, is a marine spatial planning process which strives for an integrated management approach to marine conservation design. As ecosystem based management gains momentum, non-governmental organizations and federal agencies have realized the need to consider socio-economic objectives for and impacts of management plans and conservation strategies on coastal and marine-related communities. This report reviews the application of three methods for the integration of socio-economics in marine conservation planning: market and non-market economic valuation and social impact assessment. Market and non-market economic valuation can be used by marine managers to make informed decisions on conservation alternatives while social impact assessments evaluate the social consequences of specific conservation or management actions. Each of these methods can be represented in a geographic information system (GIS) and integrated with biophysical data in marine spatial planning processes. This report shows how market and non-market economic values and local ecological knowledge can be mapped both onshore and offshore and be used in designing marine conservation strategies. The findings presented here demonstrate that although there are defined methods for socio-economic analysis and some techniques for integrating socio-economics into marine spatial planning process, marine conservation planners are not applying them when making management decisions. This report is a guide for conservation organizations and marine managers on how to set biophysical and socio-economic objectives and use clearly defined methods to incorporate social science into marine conservation and spatial planning. Master Thesis Northwest Atlantic Duke University Libraries: DukeSpace
institution Open Polar
collection Duke University Libraries: DukeSpace
op_collection_id ftdukeunivdsp
language English
topic socio-economics
marine spatial planning
marine ecosystem based management
non-market valuation
social impact assessment
spellingShingle socio-economics
marine spatial planning
marine ecosystem based management
non-market valuation
social impact assessment
Feldman, Lindsey
Where are all the people? A study on the integration of socio-economics in marine conservation planning
topic_facet socio-economics
marine spatial planning
marine ecosystem based management
non-market valuation
social impact assessment
description The Northwest Atlantic Marine Ecoregional Assessment, designed by The Nature Conservancy, is a marine spatial planning process which strives for an integrated management approach to marine conservation design. As ecosystem based management gains momentum, non-governmental organizations and federal agencies have realized the need to consider socio-economic objectives for and impacts of management plans and conservation strategies on coastal and marine-related communities. This report reviews the application of three methods for the integration of socio-economics in marine conservation planning: market and non-market economic valuation and social impact assessment. Market and non-market economic valuation can be used by marine managers to make informed decisions on conservation alternatives while social impact assessments evaluate the social consequences of specific conservation or management actions. Each of these methods can be represented in a geographic information system (GIS) and integrated with biophysical data in marine spatial planning processes. This report shows how market and non-market economic values and local ecological knowledge can be mapped both onshore and offshore and be used in designing marine conservation strategies. The findings presented here demonstrate that although there are defined methods for socio-economic analysis and some techniques for integrating socio-economics into marine spatial planning process, marine conservation planners are not applying them when making management decisions. This report is a guide for conservation organizations and marine managers on how to set biophysical and socio-economic objectives and use clearly defined methods to incorporate social science into marine conservation and spatial planning.
author2 Orbach, Michael
format Master Thesis
author Feldman, Lindsey
author_facet Feldman, Lindsey
author_sort Feldman, Lindsey
title Where are all the people? A study on the integration of socio-economics in marine conservation planning
title_short Where are all the people? A study on the integration of socio-economics in marine conservation planning
title_full Where are all the people? A study on the integration of socio-economics in marine conservation planning
title_fullStr Where are all the people? A study on the integration of socio-economics in marine conservation planning
title_full_unstemmed Where are all the people? A study on the integration of socio-economics in marine conservation planning
title_sort where are all the people? a study on the integration of socio-economics in marine conservation planning
publishDate 2009
url https://hdl.handle.net/10161/973
genre Northwest Atlantic
genre_facet Northwest Atlantic
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/10161/973
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