Management Planning for Nature Conservation: A Theoretical Basis & Practical GuideSpringer Science & Business Media, 2007 M12 4 - 426 pages Mike Alexander’s Management Planning for Nature Conservation brings a new dimension to the modern literature on conservation management. Combining key theories with real practice it fills a critical gap which has often hindered in-depth understanding of the planning process. The book provides historical and rational background which helps to explain what makes a really effective management plan, and it presents a detailed practical guide to developing such a plan. It concludes with a series of case studies which clearly illustrate the underlying principles drawn out in the text, while highlighting the different approaches demanded by very different sites. Drawing on the expertise of leaders in both conservation research and wildlife management, and with a combined experience from around the world, this book is essential reading for professional conservation managers and any student studying management planning for conservation within a range of degree and postgraduate courses. The book will be equally important for those attending professional training programmes and courses for practitioners in the statutory and voluntary environment and wildlife conservation sector. Mike Alexander has been at the forefront of developing systems and methods in the field of management planning for conservation, with experience ranging from Uganda to Estonia, and from Costa Rica to Wales. He was a member of the team responsible for developing the current management planning guidelines for the international Ramsar (Convention on Wetlands) sites located around the world. |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 81
... status (local, national and international) of a feature. In some ways, this may be regarded as a consensus approach because it takes account of as wide a range of opinion as possible. 4.2. Factors: (Preparation. of. a. Master. List). ( ...
... status. Objectives comprise two components: ○ A vision which describes in plain language the outcome or condition that we require for a feature ○ Performance indicators which are monitored to provide the evidence that will be used to ...
... Status or otherwise. An objective based on FCS must be provided with two different kinds of performance indicators. These are: ○ Quantified attributes with limits (an attribute is a characteristic of a feature that can be monitored to ...
... status of access and an assessment of current access management. We will have some confidence in current management when access provisions are considered to be favourable and little confidence when they are not. The relationship between ...
... status we should assume that they are unfavourable. (If the status of a feature is unknown, we should assume that it is unfavourable.) ○ Factors that affect, or may affect, conservation features should not be dismissed until we are ...
Contents
1 | |
5 | |
14 | |
31 | |
Alexander_04pdf | 38 |
Alexander_05pdf | 49 |
Alexander_06pdf | 63 |
Alexander_07pdf | 77 |
Alexander_14pdf | 188 |
Alexander_15pdf | 237 |
Alexander_16pdf | 250 |
Alexander_17pdf | 273 |
Alexander_CS1pdf | 315 |
Alexander_CS2pdf | 345 |
Alexander_CS3pdf | 367 |
Alexander_CS4pdf | 380 |
Alexander_08pdf | 95 |
Alexander_09pdf | 105 |
Alexander_10pdf | 118 |
Alexander_11pdf | 129 |
Alexander_12pdf | 149 |
Alexander_13pdf | 169 |
Alexander_CS5pdf | 399 |
Alexander_Glossarypdf | 411 |
Alexander_Refpdf | 415 |
Alexander_Indexpdf | 421 |
Other editions - View all
Management Planning for Nature Conservation: A Theoretical Basis & Practical ... Mike Alexander No preview available - 2012 |
Management Planning for Nature Conservation: A Theoretical Basis & Practical ... Mike Alexander No preview available - 2012 |