Managing National Parks : How Public-Private Partnerships Can Aid Conservation
National parks in developing countries are home to the planet's most undervalued natural assets. Positive experience with public-private partnerships in nature conservation in Africa shows that they can improve service through professional ma...
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2012
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/06/7039541/managing-national-parks-public-private-partnerships-can-aid-conservation http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11185 |
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okr-10986-111852021-04-23T14:02:54Z Managing National Parks : How Public-Private Partnerships Can Aid Conservation Saporiti, Nico ALIEN FLORA BASIC CONSERVATION BIODIVERSITY BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION BIODIVERSITY MANAGEMENT BREEDING CARBON COMMERCIAL USE COMMERCIALIZATION CONSERVATION CONSERVATION AGENCIES CONSERVATION AREA CONSERVATION FINANCE CONSERVATION MANAGEMENT CONSERVATION PROGRAMS CONSERVATION STRATEGY CONSERVATIONIST CORAL CORAL PARK DEFORESTATION ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY ECONOMIC SUSTAINABILITY ECONOMIC VALUE ECOTOURISM INDUSTRY ENDANGERED SPECIES ENVIRONMENTAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHARACTERISTICS ENVIRONMENTAL REHABILITATION EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATES EXPLOITATION FAUNA FENCES FINANCIAL RESOURCES FIRE FIRE MANAGEMENT FOREST HOTEL HUNTING INCOME INDIGENOUS SPECIES LARGE MAMMALS LOCAL COMMUNITIES MARINE PARK NATIONAL PARKS NATURAL ASSETS NATURAL ENVIRONMENT NATURAL PARKS NATURAL RESOURCE NATURE OPERATING EXPENSES OPERATING REVENUE PARK ENTRY FEES PARK INFRASTRUCTURE PATROL VEHICLES POACHING PRIVATE SECTOR PROTECTED AREAS PUBLIC PUBLIC FUNDS PUBLIC RESOURCES RECREATION REEF RESERVES RESTAURANTS REVENUE SOURCES REVENUE TRANSFERS ROADS SAFARIS SANCTUARY SPECIES SPECIES CONSERVATION SPECIES OF FISH SUSTAINABILITY TAX TAX REVENUE TOURISM TOURISM INDUSTRY TOURISM INFRASTRUCTURE TOURISM MARKET TOURISM OPERATORS TOURISM OPPORTUNITIES TOURISM PRODUCTS TOURISM REVENUE TOURISTS TRANSPARENCY UNEMPLOYMENT WILDLIFE WILDLIFE AGENCIES WILDLIFE CONSERVATION WILDLIFE SERVICE National parks in developing countries are home to the planet's most undervalued natural assets. Positive experience with public-private partnerships in nature conservation in Africa shows that they can improve service through professional management and marketing, reduce the need for public subsidies, and mobilize capital for investment in park infrastructure and biodiversity. The best choice of structure for such partnerships depends mainly on the capacity of the incumbent public park agency. Within a national system of protected areas a diversified funding strategy makes it possible to focus public resources on the protected areas that cannot be self-financing but are critical to achieving the system's biodiversity objectives. 2012-08-13T14:23:08Z 2012-08-13T14:23:08Z 2006-06 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/06/7039541/managing-national-parks-public-private-partnerships-can-aid-conservation http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11185 English Viewpoint: Public Policy for the Private Sector; Note No. 309 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Viewpoint Publications & Research |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English |
topic |
ALIEN FLORA BASIC CONSERVATION BIODIVERSITY BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION BIODIVERSITY MANAGEMENT BREEDING CARBON COMMERCIAL USE COMMERCIALIZATION CONSERVATION CONSERVATION AGENCIES CONSERVATION AREA CONSERVATION FINANCE CONSERVATION MANAGEMENT CONSERVATION PROGRAMS CONSERVATION STRATEGY CONSERVATIONIST CORAL CORAL PARK DEFORESTATION ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY ECONOMIC SUSTAINABILITY ECONOMIC VALUE ECOTOURISM INDUSTRY ENDANGERED SPECIES ENVIRONMENTAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHARACTERISTICS ENVIRONMENTAL REHABILITATION EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATES EXPLOITATION FAUNA FENCES FINANCIAL RESOURCES FIRE FIRE MANAGEMENT FOREST HOTEL HUNTING INCOME INDIGENOUS SPECIES LARGE MAMMALS LOCAL COMMUNITIES MARINE PARK NATIONAL PARKS NATURAL ASSETS NATURAL ENVIRONMENT NATURAL PARKS NATURAL RESOURCE NATURE OPERATING EXPENSES OPERATING REVENUE PARK ENTRY FEES PARK INFRASTRUCTURE PATROL VEHICLES POACHING PRIVATE SECTOR PROTECTED AREAS PUBLIC PUBLIC FUNDS PUBLIC RESOURCES RECREATION REEF RESERVES RESTAURANTS REVENUE SOURCES REVENUE TRANSFERS ROADS SAFARIS SANCTUARY SPECIES SPECIES CONSERVATION SPECIES OF FISH SUSTAINABILITY TAX TAX REVENUE TOURISM TOURISM INDUSTRY TOURISM INFRASTRUCTURE TOURISM MARKET TOURISM OPERATORS TOURISM OPPORTUNITIES TOURISM PRODUCTS TOURISM REVENUE TOURISTS TRANSPARENCY UNEMPLOYMENT WILDLIFE WILDLIFE AGENCIES WILDLIFE CONSERVATION WILDLIFE SERVICE |
spellingShingle |
ALIEN FLORA BASIC CONSERVATION BIODIVERSITY BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION BIODIVERSITY MANAGEMENT BREEDING CARBON COMMERCIAL USE COMMERCIALIZATION CONSERVATION CONSERVATION AGENCIES CONSERVATION AREA CONSERVATION FINANCE CONSERVATION MANAGEMENT CONSERVATION PROGRAMS CONSERVATION STRATEGY CONSERVATIONIST CORAL CORAL PARK DEFORESTATION ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY ECONOMIC SUSTAINABILITY ECONOMIC VALUE ECOTOURISM INDUSTRY ENDANGERED SPECIES ENVIRONMENTAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHARACTERISTICS ENVIRONMENTAL REHABILITATION EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATES EXPLOITATION FAUNA FENCES FINANCIAL RESOURCES FIRE FIRE MANAGEMENT FOREST HOTEL HUNTING INCOME INDIGENOUS SPECIES LARGE MAMMALS LOCAL COMMUNITIES MARINE PARK NATIONAL PARKS NATURAL ASSETS NATURAL ENVIRONMENT NATURAL PARKS NATURAL RESOURCE NATURE OPERATING EXPENSES OPERATING REVENUE PARK ENTRY FEES PARK INFRASTRUCTURE PATROL VEHICLES POACHING PRIVATE SECTOR PROTECTED AREAS PUBLIC PUBLIC FUNDS PUBLIC RESOURCES RECREATION REEF RESERVES RESTAURANTS REVENUE SOURCES REVENUE TRANSFERS ROADS SAFARIS SANCTUARY SPECIES SPECIES CONSERVATION SPECIES OF FISH SUSTAINABILITY TAX TAX REVENUE TOURISM TOURISM INDUSTRY TOURISM INFRASTRUCTURE TOURISM MARKET TOURISM OPERATORS TOURISM OPPORTUNITIES TOURISM PRODUCTS TOURISM REVENUE TOURISTS TRANSPARENCY UNEMPLOYMENT WILDLIFE WILDLIFE AGENCIES WILDLIFE CONSERVATION WILDLIFE SERVICE Saporiti, Nico Managing National Parks : How Public-Private Partnerships Can Aid Conservation |
relation |
Viewpoint: Public Policy for the Private Sector; Note No. 309 |
description |
National parks in developing countries
are home to the planet's most undervalued natural
assets. Positive experience with public-private
partnerships in nature conservation in Africa shows that
they can improve service through professional management and
marketing, reduce the need for public subsidies, and
mobilize capital for investment in park infrastructure and
biodiversity. The best choice of structure for such
partnerships depends mainly on the capacity of the incumbent
public park agency. Within a national system of protected
areas a diversified funding strategy makes it possible to
focus public resources on the protected areas that cannot be
self-financing but are critical to achieving the
system's biodiversity objectives. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Viewpoint |
author |
Saporiti, Nico |
author_facet |
Saporiti, Nico |
author_sort |
Saporiti, Nico |
title |
Managing National Parks : How Public-Private Partnerships Can Aid Conservation |
title_short |
Managing National Parks : How Public-Private Partnerships Can Aid Conservation |
title_full |
Managing National Parks : How Public-Private Partnerships Can Aid Conservation |
title_fullStr |
Managing National Parks : How Public-Private Partnerships Can Aid Conservation |
title_full_unstemmed |
Managing National Parks : How Public-Private Partnerships Can Aid Conservation |
title_sort |
managing national parks : how public-private partnerships can aid conservation |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/06/7039541/managing-national-parks-public-private-partnerships-can-aid-conservation http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11185 |
_version_ |
1764415828834385920 |