Building shared knowledge capital to support natural resource governance in the Northern periphery (Q4297874): Difference between revisions

From EU Knowledge Graph
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(‎Changed an Item: Edited by the materialized bot - inferring region from the coordinates)
(‎Changed an Item: Attach the beneficiary based on the string)
Property / beneficiary
 
Q4365666 (Deleted Item)
Property / beneficiary: Q4365666 (Deleted Item) / rank
 
Normal rank

Revision as of 11:45, 22 June 2022

Project Q4297874 in Ireland, Sweden, Finland, Iceland, Norway
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Building shared knowledge capital to support natural resource governance in the Northern periphery
Project Q4297874 in Ireland, Sweden, Finland, Iceland, Norway

    Statements

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    18,120.61 Euro
    0 references
    39,433.11 Euro
    0 references
    45.95 percent
    0 references
    15 June 2015
    0 references
    14 November 2015
    0 references
    Natural Resources Institute Finland
    0 references
    Q4365666 (Deleted Item)
    0 references

    66°29'7.22"N, 25°42'54.18"E
    0 references

    69°38'57.12"N, 18°57'19.15"E
    0 references

    63°49'16.57"N, 20°18'57.10"E
    0 references

    66°28'50.23"N, 25°42'50.58"E
    0 references

    53°16'33.74"N, 9°3'34.52"W
    0 references

    64°8'14.06"N, 21°56'44.99"W
    0 references
    Peripheral livelihoods and land use depend heavily on natural resources but their management is often contested by various stakeholder interests. The challenge of reconciliation of various land-use modes is how to acknowledge, combine and make use of local, scientific and other expert knowledge. This project develops planning tools that make use of participatory techniques for decision making. Concretely, the development of participatory tools such as participatory GIS, is needed. Until now these tools have been developed for urban areas and utilized successfully. However, the challenges of the use the tools in rural areas are the following: how to reach various stakeholders in sparsely populated areas and how to make especially social and traditional knowledge spatially explicit. In addition, the challenge is how to apply information technology dependent participatory methods for remote regions. The project will work with stakeholders in such livelihoods as herding, tourism, recreation, forestry, mining and energy production. The focus is in local, as well as in indigenous, residents’ knowledge. (English)
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references