Toward Crowd-sourced Soundscape Monitoring in Protected Areas: Integrating Sound Dominance and Triggers to Facilitate Proactive Management

Gale, Trace; Ednie, Andrea

Keywords: Citizen science, soundscape, visitor perceptions, sound dominance, visitor use management

Abstract

This paper considers increasing global reliance on privately protected areas (PPAs) and associated nature-based tourism (NBT). A targeted literature review was guided by three research questions, which sought to understand how neoliberal concepts and dynamics manifest in private forms of conservation; how private forms of conservation have manifested in Chile; and, how Chileans’ attitudes towards their government’s neoliberal policies might affect their expectations of PPAs. The search strategy resulted in 284 resources. Three dimensions of neoliberal approaches to PPAs emerged from the data each highlighting specific vulnerabilities: a loss of the social embeddedness of nature; an imposition of global, capital dynamics; and conflicting discourses and assumptions. Results suggest that, in order to improve long-term support and integration of PPAs and NBT, greater attention needs to be given to social well-being outcomes (including equity and justice concerns), building of social capital, and the preservation of local identities and histories. Additionally, regional and PPA-specific land-use planning needs to incorporate greater public engagement, cross-jurisdictional coordination, and transparent and inclusive decision-making.

Más información

Título de la Revista: Journal of Park and Recreation Administration
Volumen: 0
Número: 0
Fecha de publicación: 2020
Página de inicio: 1
Página final: 18
Idioma: English
Financiamiento/Sponsor: This research was supported by Chile's National Research and Development Agency (ANID) under ANID's Regional Program R17A10002.
URL: https://js.sagamorepub.com/jpra/article/view/10464
DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18666/JPRA-2020-10464

Notas: WOS Core Collection, ISI, Scopus