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Abstract

Members of the public and resource-dependent communities are increasingly participating alongside professional scientists to monitor the natural world. This study applies the contention from development studies that participatory approaches may be tyrannical to participatory monitoring of Nepal's community forests. There is a tyranny of the group because elites within the community stand to benefit at the cost of those already marginalized. In theory, tyranny is produced through the methods employed in the projects, as they promote scientific systems of monitoring at the expense of local understandings of environmental change; in practice, however, the latter aspects override official monitoring to enable effective learning from the projects. In some instances, tyranny is produced through decision-making and control, whilst, in other cases, the reverse is true and communities are empowered through their participatory monitoring efforts. Policy makers and those involved in participatory monitoring should endeavour to transform tyranny created at local and wider scales. Participatory monitoring holds huge potential in the assessment of biodiversity, natural resources and ecosystem services, but programmes and projects need to effectively deliver associated benefits of conservation and community empowerment.

Keywords

citizen science; community-based conservation; development studies; ecological monitoring; interdisciplinary; Nepal; participation; participatory monitoring

Published in

Environmental Conservation
2015, volume: 42, number: 3, pages: 268-277
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS

SLU Authors

UKÄ Subject classification

Other Earth Sciences

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S037689291500003X

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/73043