| Literature DB >> 31555874 |
Jana Zscheischler1,2, Maria Busse3, Nico Heitepriem4.
Abstract
Traditional cultural landscapes are of special value not only for reasons of nature conservation and high species diversity but also because they intersect with the identity of local communities, support recreation and tourism, and preserve cultural heritage. Structural changes in rural areas threaten these unique sceneries and environments in Europe and worldwide. As a result, the question of how to maintain and manage cultural landscapes where economic benefits are not assured has become a priority in science and in practice. Considering this context, community-based collaborative landscape management (CLM) can be considered an innovative and promising approach. This paper presents results from a stakeholder analysis examining the preconditions and opportunities for initiating a CLM in the biosphere reserve known as 'Spreewald'. The results indicate that due to the type of problem (landscape change)-which is characterised by complexity, beneficial linkages to a multitude of actor groups, and broad problem awareness-CLM appears to be feasible. However, other preconditions related to social relationships among actor groups, questions of legitimate coordination and the collaborative capacity of the community are not met, thus reducing the likelihood of success. To address these challenges, we discuss the potential of transdisciplinary processes (TD) to assist local communities in establishing such a collaborative problem-solving and management approach. We show that TD is highly valuable and supportive during this critical stage of emerging collaboration.Entities:
Keywords: Cultural landscape; Integrated landscape approach; Land use conflict; Nature conservation; Tourism; Transdisciplinary research
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31555874 PMCID: PMC6838031 DOI: 10.1007/s00267-019-01205-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Manage ISSN: 0364-152X Impact factor: 3.266
Overview of interviewees
| Actor group | Number of interviewees | Acronym |
|---|---|---|
| Member of biosphere reserve | 2 | BR |
| Tourism expert | 1 | TE |
| Farmers’ association (representative) | 2 | FA |
| Nature conservationist | 2 | NC |
| Farmer | 7 | F |
| Local politician | 1 | P |
| Tourism provider | 2 | TP |
| Land owner | 8 | LO |
Fig. 1Satellite image of a typical part of the case study region (known as Spreewald biosphere reserve) located in Northeast Germany close to capital Berlin. The region is characterised by a small-scale structured agricultural landscape
Identified actors and groups of interest (results from the interviews)
| Biosphere & nature conservation | Farmers | Tourism providers | Local residents & small land owners and users (often mute actors) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| High | High | Moderate/partly high | High/partly unknown | |
| Loss of areas with high biodiversity value (protected species) | Loss of income and agricultural land | Loss of attractive scenery | Loss of attractive scenery | |
| Biodiversity & nature conservation | Income and cost recovery | Attractive scenery as a basis for tourism | Maintenance of cultural landscape and heritage | |
| High (initiating and driving) | Mainly scepticism and conflict; mistrust | Hesitation/rejection (free-rider problem) | Mainly scepticism, in some cases high | |
| Time, manpower, facilitation skills | Time, manpower, capacity to collaborate | Direct or indirect payments, broker skills | Time, property rights (in case of landowners), capacity to collaborate | |
| Communication: information on processes in the BR; increased acceptance and importance, trust-building | Conservation of cultural landscape, farmers’ image (biodiversity and nature conservation) | Marketing effects (image of ‘responsible tourism’) | Cultural identity; economic strengthening of region, recreation |
aBased on analytical framework (see 2.3)
bInductively derived
Preconditions for the development of a Collaborative Landscape Management (CLM) programme identified in the case study and related to evidence from literature
| Deductive categories | Sub- categories | Evidence in literature |
|---|---|---|
| Actors and groups of interest | • Interests in issue/motivation • Diversity of actors • Commitment • Power and influence | e.g., Nölting and Schäfer Almeida et al. |
| Problem awareness and definition | • Perceived crisis • Urgency and importance • Responsibilities (ownership) | e.g., Gray |
| Value-based objectives | • Targeted cultural landscape • Concept of sustainability • Coincidence of or shared values | e.g., Gray |
| Actor’s interrelations | • Perceived interdependency • Mutual expectations and appreciation • Trust • Communication (knowledge exchange, mutual understanding) | e.g., Hulshof and Vos |
| Willingness to collaborate | • Acceptability of solutions • Free-rider problem • Sense of community • Past experiences and frames • Victim identity | e.g., Trimble and Berkes |
| Resources | • Neutral leadership/moderator • Time • Personal resources (diverse and innovative actors) • Financing • Skills, competencies | e.g., McCarthy et al. |