Skip to main content

Parks, Peace, and Partnership: Table of Contents

Parks, Peace, and Partnership
Table of Contents
    • Notifications
    • Privacy
  • Project HomeParks, Peace, and Partnership
  • Projects
  • Learn more about Manifold

Notes

Show the following:

  • Annotations
  • Resources
Search within:

Adjust appearance:

  • font
    Font style
  • color scheme
  • Margins
table of contents
  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Table of Contents
  5. Foreword
  6. Acknowledgments
  7. Introduction
  8. Section 1. Lessons from the Field
    1. 1. Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park: Observations and Retrospection on Cooperation Issues
    2. 2. Enhancing Connectivity through Cooperative Management: Lessons Learned from Twenty-One Years of Transboundary Programs in the Australian Alps
    3. 3. The Australian Alps Transboundary Partnership: Analyzing its Success as a Tourism/Protected Area Partnership
    4. 4. Transboundary Protection of Mont Blanc: Twenty Years of Tri-national Negotiation around the Roof of the European Alps
    5. 5. On the Edge: Factors Influencing Conservation and Management in Two Border Mexican Parks
    6. 6. Environmental Peace-building in Peru and Bolivia: The Collaboration Framework for Lago de Titicaca
  9. Section 2. The Southern African Experience
    1. 7. Transfrontier Conservation Areas: The Southern African Experience
    2. 8. Building Robustness to Disturbance: Governance in Southern African Peace Parks
    3. 9. Community-based Wildlife Management in Support of Transfrontier Conservation: The Selous–Niassa and Kawango Upper Zambezi Challenges
    4. 10. Fast-Track Strengthening of the Management Capacity of Conservation Institutions: The Case of the Effect of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park in Mozambique’s Capacity
    5. 11. The Maloti Drakensberg Transfrontier Conservation and Development Project: A Cooperative Initiative between Lesotho and South Africa
  10. Section 3. Education and International Peace Parks
    1. 12. Transboundary Environmental Education: A Graduate Program Case Study
    2. 13. Transboundary Conservation Management, Research, and Learning: A South African and United States Perspective
    3. 14. Successes and Challenges that Face a Peace Park’s Training and Education Facility
  11. Section 4. Peace Park Proposals
    1. 15. The Siachen Peace Park Proposal: Reconfiguring the Kashmir Conflict?
    2. 16. Korean Demilitarized Zone Peace and Nature Park
    3. 17. Feasibility of a Corridor between Singhalila National Park and Senchal Wildlife Sanctuary: A Study of Five Villages between Poobong and 14th Mile Village
    4. 18. Under the Penumbra of Waterton-Glacier and Homeland Security: Could a Peace Park Appear along the U.S.–Mexican Border?
    5. 19. The Niagara International Peace Park: A Proposal
  12. Notes on Contributors

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Foreword by Nikita Lopoukhine

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Michael S. Quinn

SECTION 1. LESSONS FROM THE FIELD

1. Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park: Observations and Retrospection on Cooperation Issues

David A. Mihalic

2. Enhancing Connectivity through Cooperative Management: Lessons Learned from Twenty-One Years of Transboundary Programs in the Australian Alps

Peter Jacobs and Gillian Anderson

3. The Australian Alps Transboundary Partnership: Analyzing its Success as a Tourism/Protected Area Partnership

Betty Weiler, Jennifer Laing, and Susan A. Moore

4. Transboundary Protection of Mont Blanc: Twenty Years of Tri-national Negotiation around the Roof of the European Alps

Barbara Ehringhaus

5. On the Edge: Factors Influencing Conservation and Management in Two Border Mexican Parks

Angeles Mendoza Sammet and Michael S. Quinn

6. Environmental Peace-building in Peru and Bolivia: The Collaboration Framework for Lago de Titicaca

J. Todd Walters

SECTION 2. THE SOUTHERN AFRICAN EXPERIENCE

7. Transfrontier Conservation Areas: The Southern African Experience

David Mabunda, Freek Venter, Danie Pienaar, and Piet Theron

8. Building Robustness to Disturbance: Governance in Southern African Peace Parks

Michael L. Schoon

9. Community-based Wildlife Management in Support of Transfrontier Conservation: The Selous–Niassa and Kawango Upper Zambezi Challenges

Goetz Schuerholz and Rolf D. Baldus

10. Fast-Track Strengthening of the Management Capacity of Conservation Institutions: The Case of the Effect of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park in Mozambique’s Capacity

Bartolomeu Soto

11. The Maloti Drakensberg Transfrontier Conservation and Development Project: A Cooperative Initiative between Lesotho and South Africa

Kevan Zunckel

SECTION 3. EDUCATION AND INTERNATIONAL PEACE PARKS

12. Transboundary Environmental Education: A Graduate Program Case Study

Len Broberg and Michael S. Quinn

13. Transboundary Conservation Management, Research, and Learning: A South African and United States Perspective

Wayne Freimund and Robert Fincham

14. Successes and Challenges that Face a Peace Park’s Training and Education Facility

Theresa Sowry

SECTION 4. PEACE PARK PROPOSALS

15. The Siachen Peace Park Proposal: Reconfiguring the Kashmir Conflict?

Kent L. Biringer and K. C. Cariappa

16. Korean Demilitarized Zone Peace and Nature Park

Hall Healy

17. Feasibility of a Corridor between Singhalila National Park and Senchal Wildlife Sanctuary: A Study of Five Villages between Poobong and 14th Mile Village

Animesh Sarkar and Milindo Chakrabarti

18. Under the Penumbra of Waterton-Glacier and Homeland Security: Could a Peace Park Appear along the U.S.–Mexican Border?

Charles C. Chester and Belinda Sifford

19. The Niagara International Peace Park: A Proposal

Lynda H. Schneekloth, Kerry Mitchell, Patrick Robson, and Robert G. Shibley

Notes on Contributors

Annotate

Next Chapter
Foreword
PreviousNext
Parks, Peace, Partnership
2008
Powered by Manifold Scholarship. Learn more at
Opens in new tab or windowmanifoldapp.org