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2011
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COMPONENT 3A-PROJECT 3A3 Institutional strengthening & technical support; Improvement of socio-economic of coral reefs
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Pacific Adaptation to Climate Change (PACC) Project Cost Benfit Analysis (CBA) Workshop Documents
Climate Change Resilience
Available Online
SPREP
2011
Reports from the PACC project
pacific
oceania
climate change
vulnerability
climatic changes
disaster risks
Pacific Adaptation to Climate Change (PACC) Project 2nd Multipartite Review Meeting 2011; SPREP, UNDP, AusAID, GIZ, PSE, IUCN, Cook Islands, Federated States of Micronesia (FSM), Fiji, Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI), Nauru, Niue, Palau, Papua New Guinea (PNG), Solomon Islands, Samoa, Tonga, Tokelau, Tuvalu, Vanuatu, NIWA, Prof Robert Mendelsohn
Climate Change Resilience
Available Online
PACC
2011
Reports from the PACC project
samoa
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Status and potential of locally-managed marine areas in the South Pacific: meeting nature conservation and sustainable livelihood targets through wide-spread implementation of LMMAs : study report
Biodiversity Conservation
Available Online
Govan, Hugh
2011
The South Pacific1 has experienced a remarkable proliferation of Marine Managed Areas (MMAs) in the last decade. These protected areas, implemented by over 500 communities spanning 15 independent countries and territories represent a unique global achievement. The approaches being developed at national levels are built on a unique feature of the region, customary tenure and resource access, and make use of, in most cases, existing community strengths in traditional knowledge and governance, combined with a local awareness of the need for action, resulting in what have been most aptly termed Locally Managed Marine Areas (LMMAs). The main driver in most cases, is a community desire to maintain or improve livelihoods, often related to perceived threats to food security or local economic revenue. In the South Pacific, conservation and sustainable use are often seen as inseparable as part of the surviving concepts of traditional environmental stewardship. The extent of this shift towards Community Based Resource Management in Melanesia and Polynesia is unprecedented on a global scale and is the subject of this report.
pacific
oceania
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