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Preservation and preemption in Japan's Shirakami Sanchi World Heritage Area
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine developments in Japan with regard to protected-area management. The focus is on ecological protection, citizen engagement, and the traditional users of the Shirakami Sanchi World Heritage Area. Design/methodology/approach - The study is based on an extensive review of literature, interviews with key actors, and field observations. Findings - This study of Shirakami Sanchi World Heritage Area, an area of ancient beech forest in northern Japan whose ecological integrity was threatened by construction of a forest road in the 1980s, points to a successful case of ecological preservation and an expanded governmental commitment to citizen engagement in protected-area planning, accompanied by a marginalization of the small number of remaining traditional users of the forest's resources. Research limitations/implications - This study points to the challenges inherent in balancing civic engagement, ecological protection, cultural heritage, and administrative expediency in protected-areas management. The findings are directed toward researchers engaged with issues surrounding management of parks and protected areas. Practical implications - Park and protected-areas managers can learn from this experience about balancing ecosystem protection, civic engagement, inclusion of traditional users, and administrative optimization in planning and management of protected areas. Originality/value - The field elements of the study are original contributions. The paper will be of value to scholars and practitioners involved with protected-area management.
Preservation and preemption in Japan's Shirakami Sanchi World Heritage Area
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine developments in Japan with regard to protected-area management. The focus is on ecological protection, citizen engagement, and the traditional users of the Shirakami Sanchi World Heritage Area. Design/methodology/approach - The study is based on an extensive review of literature, interviews with key actors, and field observations. Findings - This study of Shirakami Sanchi World Heritage Area, an area of ancient beech forest in northern Japan whose ecological integrity was threatened by construction of a forest road in the 1980s, points to a successful case of ecological preservation and an expanded governmental commitment to citizen engagement in protected-area planning, accompanied by a marginalization of the small number of remaining traditional users of the forest's resources. Research limitations/implications - This study points to the challenges inherent in balancing civic engagement, ecological protection, cultural heritage, and administrative expediency in protected-areas management. The findings are directed toward researchers engaged with issues surrounding management of parks and protected areas. Practical implications - Park and protected-areas managers can learn from this experience about balancing ecosystem protection, civic engagement, inclusion of traditional users, and administrative optimization in planning and management of protected areas. Originality/value - The field elements of the study are original contributions. The paper will be of value to scholars and practitioners involved with protected-area management.
Preservation and preemption in Japan's Shirakami Sanchi World Heritage Area
Robert J Mason (author)
2015
Article (Journal)
English
Sustainability of Japan’s Natural Heritage
Springer Verlag | 2023
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Springer Verlag | 2023
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