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Introduction
Much of the action taken by development practitioners to
address local level environmental problems in the Third World consists of projects, such
as tree planting schemes, soil bunding efforts or improved irrigation management
strategies, which seek to establish resource use at sustainable levels for selected target
areas. In spite of occasional suggestions that broader-level national or international
polices should be formulated with the aim of making natural resource management concerns
an integral part of economic and social policy (Warford, 1989), this type of approach
remains dominant. It is therefore not surprising that the current discussion of
environment and development issues often mentions "people's participation" as a
prerequisite for successful "sustainable development". Resource management
projects, as currently implemented, depend heavily on broad-based co-operation and
collaboration because they often rely on the combined actions of individuals which,
whether such actions be planting trees or refraining from overfishing, by their nature
cannot easily be coerced or enforced. The willingness of people to undertake the required
activities what is commonly understood as their "participation" is
therefore essential for the success of these projects. This paper discusses ways in which
a more thorough understanding of the range of activities which constitute true people's
participation in local level environmental activities from the development of
indigenous resource management systems to resistance to destructive external initiatives
can be used to form the basis of a more constructive approach to sustainable
development.
The analysis contained in this paper follows from some of
the work undertaken within the UNRISD research programme on sustainable development and
participation in resource management, which explores, among other things, the dynamics of
local level initiatives concerned with environmental degradation, and traditionally
sustainable resource management practices. Although definitive findings from this
programme are not yet available, the research undertaken to date has indicated a number of
areas in which the standard interpretation of the dynamics of the process of localized
environmental degradation can usefully be re-examined. This paper explores the issues
raised by the research and the insights gained in the process. It opens with a discussion
of the prevailing approaches to environmental problems by the development community,
suggesting two areas in which a broader understanding of "participation" can
contribute toward the formulation of more productive solutions. It then briefly defines "sustainable
development" as it is used here, and discusses the utility of this concept. The paper
then discusses issues connected with the continued viability of traditional resource
management systems, including population pressure, the effect of changing economic
structures, common property and human rights issues.
The next section discusses popular initiatives which have
affected local level environmental issues, both in the form of organized participatory
activities and social protest movements, and the potential which such initiatives have for
contributing to arresting or reversing environmental degradation. It is argued that these
activities, even those which have evolved precisely to oppose outside developmental
interventions, have very important implications for the formulation of more effective
sustainable development strategies.
Finally, the paper examines the question of the apparent
linkages between poverty and environmental degradation in the Third World in the light of
the issues raised by the research. It is argued that, although in certain cases poverty
clearly aggravates processes of degradation, an analysis positing a simple linkage between
these two is incomplete, and unhelpful in policy terms, without the inclusion of the
concept of empowerment.
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