Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T16:46:10.811Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Public support for protected areas in new forest frontiers in the Brazilian Amazon

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 August 2019

Helenilza Ferreira Albuquerque Cunha
Affiliation:
Universidade Federal do Amapá, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Biodiversidade Tropical, Rod. Juscelino Kubitschek, Km 2 – Jardim Marco Zero, Macapá-AP, 68903-419, Brazil
Adriano Ferreira de Souza
Affiliation:
Universidade Federal do Amapá, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Biodiversidade Tropical, Rod. Juscelino Kubitschek, Km 2 – Jardim Marco Zero, Macapá-AP, 68903-419, Brazil
José Maria Cardoso da Silva*
Affiliation:
University of Miami, Department of Geography, 1300 Campo Sano Avenue, PO Box 248067, Coral Gables, FL 33124-4401, USA
*
Author for correspondence: José Maria Cardoso da Silva, Email: jcsilva@miami.edu

Summary

Gazetting and maintaining protected areas (PAs) are political processes and, as such, depend on wider society’s support in order to achieve their aims. In this paper, we evaluated the influence of gender, education, age, income, place of origin and place of residence on public support for PAs in the Brazilian state of Amapá, a new tropical forest frontier. We gathered 615 complete interviews with adults living in both rural and urban settings. We found that most (90.5%) of the participants support PAs and that this attitude is more likely to exist among urban than rural participants. We found that gender, education, age, income and place of origin did not influence support for PAs. Biodiversity conservation is the most common reason why PAs receive public support. In contrast, participants who do not favour PAs see them as providing no benefit to people. We suggest that support by local political leaders from dominant and rival political parties for conservation helps to promote acceptance of PAs by stakeholders. However, relatively low support for PAs among rural participants could indicate that the expectations of these populations regarding the social benefits associated with this conservation policy have yet to be fulfilled.

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
© Foundation for Environmental Conservation 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Allendorf, TD, Allendorf, K (2013) Gender and attitudes toward protected areas in Myanmar. Society & Natural Resources 26, 962973.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Angelsen, A, Rudel, TK (2013) Designing and implementing effective REDD+ policies: a forest transition approach. Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 7, 91113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bragagnolo, C, Malhado, ACM, Jepson, P, Ladle, RJ (2016) Modelling local attitudes to protected areas in developing countries. Conservation and Society 14, 163182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Byrka, K, Kaiser, FG, Olko, J (2017) Understanding the acceptance of nature-preservation-related restrictions as the result of the compensatory effects of environmental attitude and behavioral costs. Environment and Behavior 49, 487508.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carrus, G, Bonaiuto, M, Bonnes, M (2005) Environmental concern, regional identity, and support for protected areas in Italy. Environment and Behavior 37, 237257.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carvalho, WD, Mustin, K (2017) The highly threatened and little-known Amazonian savannahs. Nature Ecology & Evolution 1, 13.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Darby, M (2018) Brazil elects Bolsonaro, who has threatened Amazon and global climate efforts [www document]. URL www.climatechangenews.com/2018/10/29/brazil-elects-bolsonaro-threatened-amazon-global-climate-efforts Google Scholar
Dawson, N, Martin, A, Danielsen, F (2018) Assessing equity in protected area governance: approaches to promote just and effective conservation. Conservation Letters 11, 18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dias, TCAC, Cunha, AC, Silva, JMC (2016) Return on investment of the ecological infrastructure in a new forest frontier in Brazilian Amazonia. Biological Conservation 194, 184193.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drummond, JA, Dias, TCAC, Brito, DMC (2008) Atlas das Unidades de Conservação do Estado do Amapá. Macapá, Brazil: MMA/IBAMA-AP; GEA/SEMA.Google Scholar
Fonseca, GAB, Rodriguez, CM, Midgley, G, Busch, J, Hannah, L, Mittermeier, RA (2007) No forest left behind. PLoS Biology 5, e216.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Friedman, RS, Law, EA, Bennett, NJ, Ives, CD, Thorn, JPR, Wilson, KA (2018) How just and just how? A systematic review of social equity in conservation research. Environmental Research Letters 13, 053001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gallazzi, S (2016) Ilegalidades nas terras do Amapá. In: Conflito, Territorialidade e Desenvolvimento: Algumas Reflexões Sobre o Campo Amapaense, eds Lomba, R, Rangel, K, Silva, M, Silva, G, pp. 194213. Macapá, Brazil: Universidade Federal do Amapá.Google Scholar
Garnett, ST, Burgess, ND, Fa, JE, Fernández-Llamazares, Á, Molnár, Z, Robinson, CJ et al. (2018) A spatial overview of the global importance of Indigenous lands for conservation. Nature Sustainability 1, 369374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gelissen, J (2007) Explaining popular support for environmental protection: a multilevel analysis of 50 nations. Environment and Behavior 39, 392415.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gomes, MAF, Barizon, RRM (2014) Panorama da contaminação ambiental por agrotóxicos e nitrato de origem agrícola no Brasil: cenário 1992/2011. Documentos/Embrapa Meio Ambiente 98, 135.Google Scholar
Hilário, RR, Toledo, JJ, Mustin, K, Castro, IJ, Costa-Neto, SV, Kauano, ÉE et al. (2017) The fate of an Amazonian savanna: government land-use planning endangers sustainable development in Amapá, the most protected Brazilian state. Tropical Conservation Science 10, 18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hirschnitz-Garbers, M, Stoll-Kleemann, S (2011) Opportunities and barriers in the implementation of protected area management: a qualitative meta-analysis of case studies from European protected areas. Geographical Journal 177, 321334.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holmes, G (2013). Exploring the relationship between local support and the success of protected areas. Conservation & Society 11, 7282.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huddart-Kennedy, E, Beckley, TM, McFarlane, BL, Nadeau, S (2009) Rural–urban differences in environmental concern in Canada. Rural Sociology 74, 309329.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (2018) IBGE Cidades [www document]. URL https://cidades.ibge.gov.br/brasil/ap/panorama Google Scholar
Instituto Chico Mendes de Conservação da Biodiversidade (2014) Conselhos Gestores de Unidades de Conservação Federais: Um Guia para Gestores e Conselheiros. Brasília, Brazil: ICMBIO.Google Scholar
Instituto de Pesquisas Científicas e Tecnológicas do Estado do Amapá (2008) Macrodiagnóstico do Estado do Amapá: Primeira Aproximação do ZEE. Macapá, Brazil: Instituto Estadual de Pesquisas Científicas e Tecnológicas do Estado do Amapá.Google Scholar
Kasecker, TP, Ramos-Neto, MB, Silva, JMC, Scarano, FR (2018) Ecosystem-based adaptation to climate change: defining hotspot municipalities for policy design and implementation in Brazil. Mitigation and Adaptation: Strategies for Global Change 23, 981993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lo, AY (2014). Negative income effect on perception of long-term environmental risk. Ecological Economics 107, 5158.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, A, Myers, R, Dawson, NM (2018) The park is ruining our livelihoods. We support the park! Unravelling the paradox of attitudes to protected areas. Human Ecology 46, 93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Minitab 18 Statistical Software (2018) Computer software. State College, PA, USA: Minitab, Inc. [www document]. URL www.minitab.com Google Scholar
Mittermeier, RA, Mittermeier, CG, Brooks, TM, Pilgrim, JD, Konstant, WR, da Fonseca, GAB, Kormos, C (2003) Wilderness and biodiversity conservation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 100, 1030910313.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mustin, K, Carvalho, WDC, Hilário, RR, Costa-Neto, SV, Silva, C, Vasconcelos, IM, Toledo, JJ (2017) Biodiversity, threats and conservation challenges in the Cerrado of Amapá, and Amazonian savanna. Nature Conservation 22, 107127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nastran, M, Istenic, MC (2015) Who is for or against the park? Factors influencing the public’s perception of a regional park: a Slovenian case study. Human Ecology Review 21, 93111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Palmieri, R, Veríssimo, A (2009) Conselhos de Unidades de Conservação: Guia Sobre sua Criação e seu Funcionamento. Piracicaba, Brazil: Imaflora; Belém, Brazil: Imazon.Google Scholar
Ruellan, A, Ruellan, F (2007) Sete anos de desenvolvimento sustentável no Amapá: um exemplo para a Amazônia. In: Desenvolvimento Sustentável no Amapá: Uma Visão Crítica, eds Ruellan, A, Cabral, M, Moulin, N, pp. 790. Brasília, Brazil: Fundação João Mangabeira.Google Scholar
Santos, ES, Cunha, AC, Cunha, HFA (2017) Hydroelectric power plant in the Amazon and socioeconomic impacts on fishermen in Ferreira Gomes county – Amapá State. Ambiente & Sociedade 20, 191208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shan, G, Gerstenberger, S (2017) Fisher’s exact approach for post hoc analysis of a chi-squared test. PLoS ONE 12, e0188709.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shibia, MG (2010) Determinants of attitudes and perceptions on resource use and management of Marsabit National Reserve, Kenya. Journal of Human Ecology 30, 5562.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silva, JMC, Chennault, CM (2018) NGOs and biodiversity conservation in the Anthropocene. In: Encyclopedia of the Anthropocene, eds Dellasala, DA, Goldstein, MI, pp. 355359. Oxford, UK: Elsevier.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
StataCorp (2017) Stata Statistical Software: Release 15. College Station, TX, USA: StataCorp LLC.Google Scholar
Struhsaker, TT, Struhsaker, PJ, Kirstin, SS (2005) Conserving Africa’s rain forests: problems in protected areas and possible solutions. Biological Conservation 123, 4554.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Triguero-Mas, M, Olomí-Solà, M, Jha, N, Zorondo-Rodríguez, F, Reyes-García, V (2010) Urban and rural perceptions of protected areas: a case study in Dandeli Wildlife Sanctuary, Western Ghats, India. Environmental Conservation 36, 208217.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Cunha et al. supplementary material

Cunha et al. supplementary material 1

Download Cunha et al. supplementary material(File)
File 19.5 KB