PAPER: Key biocultural values guide restoration

URL: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/rec.12318

Key biocultural values to guide restoration action and planning in New Zealand

December 2015

Lyver PO, Akins A, Phipps H, Kahui V, Towns DR, Moller H 2016. Key biocultural values to guide restoration action and planning in New Zealand. Restoration Ecology 24(3): 314-323.

ABSTRACT

A pluralist and cross-cultural approach that accommodates differing values while encouraging the collaboration and social cohesion necessary for the complex task of ecological restoration is needed. We used qualitative and quantitative analyses to investigate value assigned to biocultural restoration of coastal forests in northern New Zealand by 26 interviewees from three groups (environmental managers, Māori community members, and community project leaders). Māori community members primarily emphasized the importance of Cultural Stewardship and Use in the restoration process, while placing less emphasis on Ecological Integrity. Otherwise, all participants shared common trends, culminating in three interrelated value sets: (1) Personal Engagement, (2) Connection, and (3) the generation and transfer of Knowledge & Wisdom.

KEYWORDS

cross-cultural; stewardship; restoration; stakeholder values; partnership

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