This publication reflects on and reinforces the lessons and experience of undertaking transboundary conservation programmes and sets out some existing and new guidance for those involved. It proposes a diagnostic approach to determining what the underlying purpose is for the transboundary initiative, and to guide the practitioner to respond to this purpose and need when the programme is designed and implemented. This advice is presented in the form of a very useful self-assessment tool developed from a suite of underlying case studies from pilot sites in the Dinaric Arc.
Pace Environmental Notes, the weblog of the Pace University School of Law’s Environmental Collection, is a gateway to news, recent books and articles, information resources, and legal research strategies relevant to the fields of environmental, energy, land use, animal law and other related disciplines.
Thursday, December 6, 2012
IUCN Report Released: Initiating Effective Transboundary Conservation: A Practitioner's Guideline Based on the Experience From the Dinaric Arc
This month, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), "the world’s oldest and largest global environmental organization," released a report titled, Initiating Effective Transboundary Conservation: A Practitioner's Guideline Based on the Experience From the Dinaric Arc (2012). The 112-page report available here, as a downloadable pdf, discusses the following:
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment