Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5117255 Journal of Environmental Management 2017 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•GSABR communities care about their environment and hold ecocentric worldviews.•Tourism and recreation are the most important perceived benefits of the GSABR.•The GSABR should consider contrasting benefits for different stakeholder groups.•Public participation is likely to be welcomed in GSABR and can help avoid tension.•The survey was successful and other biospheres should replicate this research.

Biosphere reserves have been studied around the world, but methods to elicit community's values, worldviews and perceptions are missing. A greater understanding of these can help avoid tension and improve successful management. This paper used a mixed-methods survey to elicit local community's environmental values, ecological world views and perceptions of the Galloway and Southern Ayrshire Biosphere Reserve (GSABR). Over three weeks, forty participants from three communities of the GSABR responded to a semi-structured mixed-methods survey. The survey revealed that residents of the GSABR greatly value wildlife and beauty of nature, and that the majority of the respondents showed concern for the environment from an ecocentric worldview. Results also revealed that the most influential tested socio-demographic characteristic affecting people's relationship to their environment is their professional affiliation. Tourism and recreation were seen as major benefits of the recent biosphere designation. Results did highlight contrasting benefits from the designation for different stakeholder groups, which could potentially lead to tensions and should be considered in the reserve management. Given the community's supportive world views and perceptions, greater participation in the biosphere's management in likely to be welcomed and should be used to avoid or mediate any conflicts. The mixed-method survey developed for this study, proved successful in eliciting these themes in the GSABR. We recommend other biosphere reserves replicate this research, to gain better understanding of local communities and increase their support and participation in reserve management.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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