Social Capital in Biodiversity Conservation and Management
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Abstract
Abstract: The knowledge and values of local communities are now being acknowledged as valuable for biodiversity conservation. Relationships of trust, reciprocity and exchange, common rules, norms and sanctions, and connectedness in groups are what make up social capital, which is a necessary resource for shaping individual action to achieve positive biodiversity outcomes. Agricultural and rural conservation programs address biodiversity at three levels: agrobiodiversity on farms, nearby nature in landscapes, and protected areas. Recent initiatives that have sought to build social capital have shown that rural people can improve their understanding of biodiversity and agroecological relationships at the same…
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2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Agricultural biodiversity
- Social capital
- Sanctions
- Measurement of biodiversity
- Reciprocity (cultural anthropology)
- Biodiversity
- Business
- Environmental resource management
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Life in Land
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