Preface The following paper reports on issues which have been raised in the
preliminary stages of the UNRISD research programme on Sustainable Development through
People's Participation in Resource Management. This programme explores the dynamics of
local level initiatives concerned with environmental degradation, examines and analyzes
traditionally sustainable resource management practices, and investigates the factors
which facilitate or constrain community participation in externally initiated resource
management projects and programmes. The author of this paper is co-ordinating the research
programme within UNRISD.
The paper focuses on local level environmental problems in
the Third World and the means by which steps can be taken to alleviate them, with evidence
drawn from the work undertaken within the UNRISD research programme on participation and
sustainable development, as well as from other published and unpublished material. It
opens with a discussion of the need for an approach to environmental issues based on the
full involvement of communities in the definition of problems and the formulation of
solutions, incorporating their perceptions of their own needs, concerns and abilities. It
is argued that a more thorough understanding of the ways in which people have
traditionally managed their resources, and an increased recognition of the ways in which
they react to unsustainable resource exploitation, can contribute to the establishment of
a more productive approach to sustainable development.
Different types of "traditional" resource
management systems are described, and the importance, in different settings, of cultural
identification with the environment, of explicit regulations regarding resource use, and
of the development and refinement of local environmental knowledge for the success of such
customary systems are discussed. The observation is made that social mechanisms which
maintain sustainable levels of resource use within a given society are often not readily
perceptible to outsiders. The paper also discusses the factors affecting the
sustainability of common property régimes. It is noted that mounting evidence against the
accuracy of theoretical models which maintain that all common property systems are
unsustainable has not prevented such models from influencing - or at least being used to
justify - policies which are designed to weaken or eliminate such systems.
The question of the ability of traditional resource
management systems to adapt and remain viable in the face of pressures from within and
without the system is addressed, and the argument is made that generalizations regarding
the future of such systems are inappropriate. The impact of population pressure on
traditionally sustainable resource use is taken as a case in point. It is clear that in
many situations the conventional conception of a direct relationship between population
growth and increased pressure on the environment holds true; such a relationship, however,
is not inevitable. Examples are given of cases in which population decline has resulted in
environmental degradation, and of other cases in which growing populations have been able
to adapt their methods of resource management in a sustainable manner.
The paper next discusses the types of collective action
undertaken by communities which see their livelihood threatened because they have been
deprived of their traditional means of resource management, or because of unsustainable
resource exploitation on the part of outsiders. It maintains that the ecological knowledge
of societies which are based on sustainable environmental management practices enables
them to better judge the real effects of ecosystem disturbance than outside evaluators.
However, the success of local attempts to intervene in the implementation of policies or
projects which adversely affect the environment depends upon a range of factors, including
the ability of local organizers to form coalitions with regional, national or
international groups with similar interests, and the existence of social, economic and
political structures which allow the formation of such alliances, and the expression of
their concerns.
The paper closes with a brief discussion of the apparent
linkages between poverty and environmental degradation in the Third World, arguing that,
although in certain cases poverty clearly aggravates processes of degradation, an analysis
positing a simple linkage between these two is incomplete without the inclusion of the
concept of empowerment.
Further UNRISD research will attempt to provide a broader
empirical basis from which to address the issues raised in this paper. Particular emphasis
will be placed on the implications of the UNRISD studies for national and international
development policy.
April 1991 |
Dharam Ghai |
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Director |
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