Does Pastoralists' Participation in the Management of National Parks in Northern Norway Contribute to Adaptive Governance?

Norwegian protected areas have historically been managed by central, expertise bureaucracy; however, a governance change in 2010 decentralized and delegated the right to manage protected areas to locally elected politicians and elected Sámi representatives in newly established National Park Boards....

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Main Authors: Risvoll, Camilla, Fedreheim, Gunn Elin, Sandberg , Audun, BurnSilver, Shauna
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss2/art71/
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spelling ftjecolog:oai:.www.ecologyandsociety.org:article/6658 2023-05-15T17:43:39+02:00 Does Pastoralists' Participation in the Management of National Parks in Northern Norway Contribute to Adaptive Governance? Risvoll, Camilla Fedreheim, Gunn Elin Sandberg , Audun BurnSilver, Shauna 2014-06-27 text/html application/pdf http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss2/art71/ en eng Resilience Alliance Ecology and Society; Vol. 19, No. 2 (2014) adaptive capacity; decentralization; national park governance; participation; pastoralists; protected areas; reindeer herding; SES framework; social-ecological systems Peer-Reviewed Reports 2014 ftjecolog 2019-04-09T11:23:01Z Norwegian protected areas have historically been managed by central, expertise bureaucracy; however, a governance change in 2010 decentralized and delegated the right to manage protected areas to locally elected politicians and elected Sámi representatives in newly established National Park Boards. We explore how this new governance change affects adaptive capacity within the reindeer industry, as the reindeer herders are now participating with other users in decision-making processes related to large tracts of protected areas in which they have pasture access. Aspects within adaptive capacity and resilience thinking are useful as complementary dimensions to a social-ecological system framework (Ostrom 2007) in exploring the dynamics of complex adaptive social-ecological systems. The National Park Board provides a novel example of adaptive governance that can foster resilient livelihoods for various groups of actors that depend on protected areas. Data for this paper were gathered primarily through observation in National Park Board meetings, focus groups, and qualitative interviews with reindeer herders and other key stakeholders. We have identified certain aspects of the national park governance that may serve as sources of resilience and adaptive capacity for the natural system and pastoral people that rely on using these areas. The regional National Park Board is as such a critical mechanism that provides an action arena for participation and conflict resolution. However, desired outcomes such as coproduction of knowledge, social learning, and increased adaptive capacity within reindeer husbandry have not been actualized at this time. The challenge with limited scope of action in the National Park Board and a mismatch between what is important for the herders and what is addressed in the National Park Board become important for the success of this management model. Other/Unknown Material Northern Norway reindeer husbandry Sámi Unknown Norway
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftjecolog
language English
topic adaptive capacity; decentralization; national park governance; participation; pastoralists; protected areas; reindeer herding; SES framework; social-ecological systems
spellingShingle adaptive capacity; decentralization; national park governance; participation; pastoralists; protected areas; reindeer herding; SES framework; social-ecological systems
Risvoll, Camilla
Fedreheim, Gunn Elin
Sandberg , Audun
BurnSilver, Shauna
Does Pastoralists' Participation in the Management of National Parks in Northern Norway Contribute to Adaptive Governance?
topic_facet adaptive capacity; decentralization; national park governance; participation; pastoralists; protected areas; reindeer herding; SES framework; social-ecological systems
description Norwegian protected areas have historically been managed by central, expertise bureaucracy; however, a governance change in 2010 decentralized and delegated the right to manage protected areas to locally elected politicians and elected Sámi representatives in newly established National Park Boards. We explore how this new governance change affects adaptive capacity within the reindeer industry, as the reindeer herders are now participating with other users in decision-making processes related to large tracts of protected areas in which they have pasture access. Aspects within adaptive capacity and resilience thinking are useful as complementary dimensions to a social-ecological system framework (Ostrom 2007) in exploring the dynamics of complex adaptive social-ecological systems. The National Park Board provides a novel example of adaptive governance that can foster resilient livelihoods for various groups of actors that depend on protected areas. Data for this paper were gathered primarily through observation in National Park Board meetings, focus groups, and qualitative interviews with reindeer herders and other key stakeholders. We have identified certain aspects of the national park governance that may serve as sources of resilience and adaptive capacity for the natural system and pastoral people that rely on using these areas. The regional National Park Board is as such a critical mechanism that provides an action arena for participation and conflict resolution. However, desired outcomes such as coproduction of knowledge, social learning, and increased adaptive capacity within reindeer husbandry have not been actualized at this time. The challenge with limited scope of action in the National Park Board and a mismatch between what is important for the herders and what is addressed in the National Park Board become important for the success of this management model.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Risvoll, Camilla
Fedreheim, Gunn Elin
Sandberg , Audun
BurnSilver, Shauna
author_facet Risvoll, Camilla
Fedreheim, Gunn Elin
Sandberg , Audun
BurnSilver, Shauna
author_sort Risvoll, Camilla
title Does Pastoralists' Participation in the Management of National Parks in Northern Norway Contribute to Adaptive Governance?
title_short Does Pastoralists' Participation in the Management of National Parks in Northern Norway Contribute to Adaptive Governance?
title_full Does Pastoralists' Participation in the Management of National Parks in Northern Norway Contribute to Adaptive Governance?
title_fullStr Does Pastoralists' Participation in the Management of National Parks in Northern Norway Contribute to Adaptive Governance?
title_full_unstemmed Does Pastoralists' Participation in the Management of National Parks in Northern Norway Contribute to Adaptive Governance?
title_sort does pastoralists' participation in the management of national parks in northern norway contribute to adaptive governance?
publisher Resilience Alliance
publishDate 2014
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss2/art71/
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre Northern Norway
reindeer husbandry
Sámi
genre_facet Northern Norway
reindeer husbandry
Sámi
op_source Ecology and Society; Vol. 19, No. 2 (2014)
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