Journal ArticleOpen Access
Sustainable use and incentive-driven conservation: realigning human and conservation interests
Authors
Author Affiliations
Eastern Medical College and Hospital, University of Kent
Published InOryx
Year2003
Citations283
Abstract
Discussions of sustainable use have become polarized. Welfarists oppose all use that involves killing animals. Among conservationists polarization arises in part from failure to distinguish between different ideas nestled under the umbrella term of ‘sustainable use’. These include direct use as an imperative or choice, the ideal of keeping any use within biologically sustainable limits, and use as a possible conservation strategy that can create positive incentives, which are key where land could otherwise be converted to biodiversity-unfriendly practices. People will continue to use wild living resources, which increasing human populations could further deplete. In response the conservation community can follow one of two approaches. On the one hand, it can try to stop use through the establishment of strictly…
View at Publisher
BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.
Fields & Keywords
Physical SciencesEnvironmental ScienceManagement, Monitoring, Policy and LawEnvironmental Conservation and ManagementEconomic and Environmental ValuationConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource ManagementEnvironmental planningEnvironmental resource managementNatural resource economicsEcologyLawMicroeconomicsMechanical engineering