Note: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.
Purchase Benefits
What is included with this book?
List of contributors | p. X |
Acknowledgements | p. XV |
General introduction | p. 1 |
Conservation needs and priorities | p. 7 |
Introduction to Part I | p. 9 |
Delineating Key Biodiversity Areas as targets for protecting areas | p. 20 |
A Master Plan for Wildlife in Sarawak: preparation, implementation and implications for conservation | p. 36 |
Indonesia's protected areas need more protection: suggestions from island examples | p. 53 |
Birds, local people and protected areas in Sulawesi, Indonesia | p. 78 |
Importance of protected areas for butterfly conservation in a tropical urban landscape | p. 95 |
Biodiversity conservation and indigenous peoples in Indonesia: the Krui people in southern Sumatra as a case study | p. 111 |
Involving resource users in the regulation of access to resources for the protection of ecosystem services provided by protected areas in Indonesia | p. 122 |
Conclusion to Part I | p. 139 |
Conservation with and against people(s) | p. 141 |
Introduction to Part II | p. 143 |
Collaboration, conservation, and community: a conversation between Suraya Afiff and Celia Lowe | p. 153 |
Hands off, hands on: communities and the management of national parks in Indonesia | p. 165 |
Conservation and conflict in Komodo National Park | p. 187 |
Another way to live: developing a programme for local people around Tanjung Puting National Park, Central Kalimantan | p. 203 |
For the people or for the trees? A case study of violence and conservation in Ruteng Nature Recreation Park | p. 222 |
Seas of discontent: conflicting knowledge paradigms within Indonesia's marine environmental arena | p. 241 |
Strategy and subjectivity in co-management of the Lore Lindu National Park (Central Sulawesi, Indonesia) | p. 266 |
Indigenous peoples and parks in Malaysia: issues and questions | p. 289 |
Protecting Chek Jawa: the politics of conservation and memory at the edge of a nation | p. 311 |
Integrating conservation and community participation in protected-area development in Brunei Darussalam | p. 330 |
Conclusion to Part II | p. 343 |
Legal and governance frameworks for conservation | p. 347 |
Introduction to Part III | p. 349 |
Protected-area management in Indonesia and Malaysia: the challenge of divided competences between centre and periphery | p. 353 |
Protecting sovereignty versus protecting parks: Malaysia's federal system and incentives against the creation of a truly national park system | p. 384 |
What protects the protected areas? Decentralization in Indonesia, the challenges facing its terrestrial and marine national parks and the rise of regional protected areas | p. 405 |
Learning from King Canute: policy approaches to biodiversity conservation, lessons from the Leuser Ecosystem | p. 429 |
Conclusion to Part III | p. 457 |
General conclusion | p. 459 |
Index | p. 465 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.