Title: Local Area Management Project (LAMP)
1Local Area Management Project (LAMP)
- SSMR Inception Workshop
- Centre for Resource Management and Environmental
Studies (CERMES) - University of the West Indies, Barbados
- in collaboration with Fisheries Division,
Dominica
2sponsoring partnership
3Context
- Only 4 of the Eastern Caribbeans marine shelf
is under some form of protection - Less than 20 of that small area is judged to be
effectively managed - Meet commitments to the Program of Work for
Protected Areas (PoWPA) under the Convention for
Biological Diversity (CBD) - Result in an effectively managed network of
marine protected areas (MPAs)
4Purpose
- Discover what we can learn from the experience of
the Soufriere Scotts Head Marine Reserve (SSMR),
and how lessons learned can be applied to improve
the governance (management, planning, policy
decisions and institutions) of the SSMR and other
marine areas in the Caribbean through local area
management authorities (LAMAs)
5LAMP study sites
6OverviewJanuary to September 2010
7Some expectations
8More expectations
9Some methods
10Historical matrix of SSMR
11Stakeholder identification for LAMA
Focus on the LAMA, not SSMR more generally
12Institutional analysis of LAMA
13SocMon swift
- Rapid application of SocMon Caribbean
- Key informant and household interviews
- Coastal and marine activities
- Attitudes and perceptions
- Governance
- Emphasis on livelihoods
14SWOT analysis of LAMA
Past and present
Future oriented
15Social network analysis of LAMA
Formal /official structure of people and
organizations
Functional structure of how things really link
and work
16Communication research/strategy
Images of the SSMR/LAMA that influence policy
decision-making
17Summary of approach
18tHANKS for your attention
- This communication was made possible by the
generous support of the American people through
the United States Agency for International
Development (USAID) under the terms of its
Cooperative Agreement Number 538-A-00-09-00100-00
(Biodiversity Threat Abatement Program)
implemented by prime recipient The Nature
Conservancy and its partner the UWI Centre for
Resource Management and Environmental Studies.
The contents and opinions expressed herein are
the responsibility of the Biodiversity Threat
Abatement PROGRAM and do not necessarily reflect
the views of USAID. - Images of SSMR supplied courtesy of Derrick
Theophille, Dominica Fisheries Division