From Passive to Active Community Conservation: A Study of Forest Governance in a Region of the Sierra Norte of Oaxaca, Mexico Thesis

(2013). From Passive to Active Community Conservation: A Study of Forest Governance in a Region of the Sierra Norte of Oaxaca, Mexico . 10.25148/etd.FI13042201

thesis or dissertation chair

authors

  • Vleet, Eric Van

abstract

  • This thesis investigates how seven communities in a subregion of the Sierra Norte of Oaxaca are conserving high forest cover in the absence of national protected areas. To conduct this study I relied on archival research and the review of community documents, focus group interviews and land use transects to explore historical and current land use. I found that communities have conserved 88.34% of the subregion as forest cover, or 58,596 hectares out of a total territory of 66,264 hectares. Analysis suggests that the communities have undergone a historical transition from more passive conservation to more active, conscious conservation particularly in the last decade. This thesis further contends that communities deserve additional financial compensation for this active conservation of globally important forests for biodiversity conservation and that exercises in systematic conservation planning ignore the reality that existing biodiversity conservation in the subregion is associated with community ownership.

publication date

  • March 25, 2013

keywords

  • Common Property
  • Community conservation
  • Conservation and Voluntary Conserved Areas
  • Environmental Justice
  • Forest Governance
  • Mexico
  • Oaxaca
  • Payments for Environmental Services
  • Political Ecology
  • Protected Areas
  • Sierra Norte
  • Systematic Conservation Planning

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)