Dear Colleagues,

Bowdoin College will be hosting a symposium on November 8, 2008, “Conservation 
as if People Mattered: Indigenous and Community Conserved Areas around the 
Globe and Here at Home,” sponsored by the Environmental Studies Program and 
Center for the Common Good at Bowdoin and The Nature Conservancy.  

This symposium will feature a number of plenary speakers discussing 
international perspectives, including the keynote address by Ashish Kothari, 
who is the 2008 Mellon Global Scholar at Bowdoin and co-chair of the IUCN Theme 
on Indigenous/Local Communities, Equity, and Protected Areas. It will also 
feature examples of fishery and forestry based conservation strategies that are 
being implemented in New England.

A brief description of the symposium is provided below along with the official 
symposium website, which has information about registration and the schedule of 
events.

Apologies for cross-posting. 

All the best, 

Phil Camill
Director, Environmental Studies
Bowdoin College
Brunswick, Maine 

______

Conservation as if People Mattered: Indigenous and Community Conserved Areas 
around the Globe and Here at Home

http://www.bowdoin.edu/environmental-studies/symposia/indigenous-community-conserved-areas-2008/index.shtml

The symposium will provide an opportunity to explore indigenous and community 
conserved areas as an emerging paradigm for conservation. Both the move towards 
collaborative management of protected areas, and the recognition of community 
conserved areas as the oldest form of protected areas, are part of this 
paradigm shift. The purpose of the symposium is to discuss this model through 
an exploration of successful case studies and to link this approach in its 
application to sites in Asia, Central America and locally in the Northeastern 
United States. Speakers and panelists will discuss the movement towards 
recognizing community rights and management institutions as an important part 
of managing sites that are crucial for their conservation values. Examples of 
types of community conserved programs will include indigenous protected sites, 
sacred sites, locally managed fisheries, and community forestry programs among 
others. The format will include three plenary speakers who will explore 
international perspectives. An afternoon panel of local speakers will provide 
an overview of community conserved initiatives in Maine and New England. In 
both sessions there will be time for the participants to engage in discussion. 
The symposium will conclude with a discussion on next steps.

The intended audience for this symposium is members of the conservation and 
social justice/human rights community, including international and local 
non-profit organizations, agencies, and faculty, staff and students from 
colleges and universities who are involved and interested in shifts within the 
field of community conservation and social justice.   The symposium will be 
open to the public. 

For more information, contact Eileen Johnson at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or 
207-798-7157.

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