Biodiversity and stakeholder participation. Jones-Walters, L. & Çil, A. Journal for Nature Conservation, 19(6):327 – 329, 2011. Cited by: 43
Biodiversity and stakeholder participation [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Consensus building through stakeholder participation is a promising new trend that takes into account the interactive character of the communication process. There is a growing realisation that stakeholder participation has a significant role to play in the development and delivery of biodiversity policy and practice. Experience and best practice from activities such as the designation and management of Natura 2000 and Integrated Coastal Zone Management shows that problem solving and conflict management are significantly enhanced through participative processes. There is therefore the potential for a change to take place in the way that biodiversity policy is developed and implemented. This brings challenges to the biodiversity community in terms of developing new skills and processes and in engaging with new agendas and sectors. © 2011 Elsevier GmbH.
@ARTICLE{Jones-Walters2011327,
	author = {Jones-Walters, Lawrence and Çil, Aysegül},
	title = {Biodiversity and stakeholder participation},
	year = {2011},
	journal = {Journal for Nature Conservation},
	volume = {19},
	number = {6},
	pages = {327 – 329},
	doi = {10.1016/j.jnc.2011.09.001},
	url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-81255149209&doi=10.1016%2fj.jnc.2011.09.001&partnerID=40&md5=6cb8d0314513aa30a0554d7aa82b891a},
	affiliations = {ECNC - European Centre for Nature Conservation, 5000 LG Tilburg, P.O. Box 90154, Netherlands},
	abstract = {Consensus building through stakeholder participation is a promising new trend that takes into account the interactive character of the communication process. There is a growing realisation that stakeholder participation has a significant role to play in the development and delivery of biodiversity policy and practice. Experience and best practice from activities such as the designation and management of Natura 2000 and Integrated Coastal Zone Management shows that problem solving and conflict management are significantly enhanced through participative processes. There is therefore the potential for a change to take place in the way that biodiversity policy is developed and implemented. This brings challenges to the biodiversity community in terms of developing new skills and processes and in engaging with new agendas and sectors. © 2011 Elsevier GmbH.},
	author_keywords = {Biodiversity policy; Civil society; Green infrastructure; Integrated Coastal Zone Management (ICZM); Natura 2000; Stakeholder participation},
	keywords = {biodiversity; civil society; coastal zone management; conservation management; integrated approach; participatory approach; policy implementation; stakeholder},
	correspondence_address = {L. Jones-Walters; ECNC - European Centre for Nature Conservation, 5000 LG Tilburg, P.O. Box 90154, Netherlands; email: joneswalters@ecnc.org},
	issn = {16171381},
	coden = {JNCOA},
	language = {English},
	abbrev_source_title = {J. Nat. Conserv.},
	type = {Review},
	publication_stage = {Final},
	source = {Scopus},
	note = {Cited by: 43}
}

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