Parks and climate change: all change Claudia Carter & Mark Reed.

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Presentation transcript:

Parks and climate change: all change Claudia Carter & Mark Reed

“Nothing is permanent but change” Heraclitus Protected areas as social- ecological systems 1 Look beyond park boundaries 2 Policy instruments to sustain ecosystem health and services 3

Multi-functional landscapes

Parks as complex & unpredictable social-ecological systems

Looking beyond park boundaries…

…to ordinary landscapes

Policy instruments  Regulation e.g. prohibited activities, permits, planning zones  Use of financial instruments e.g. grants, subsidies, tax breaks, user fees, taxes  Building capacity and providing people with information e.g. training; websites; research & advisory services  More flexibility in leases and uses of interim and neglected spaces e.g. urban brownfield; upgrading of low biodiversity value land; diversification of bland parkland)

Payments for Ecosystem Services  A voluntary transaction where  A well-defined ecosystem service (or land use likely to secure that service)  Is being “bought” by a (minimum one) ecosystem service buyer  From a (minimum one) ecosystem service provider  If and only if the ecosystem service provider secures provision (conditionality)

Payments for Ecosystem Services

Conclusions  Sole focus on protected areas may distract from good land use/planning more generally  Environmental governance needs to be facilitated across integrated protected and “ordinary” landscapes  Fundamental thinking about interactions between society, protected areas and the greenspace between people and parks

Contact  Claudia Carter Online:  Prof Mark Reed Online:

Slides with further information

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