CHAPTER 5 Bio-cultural Community Protocols and Protected Areas 1 Barbara Lassen, Gary Martin and Olivier Rukundo 1. People and Protected Areas: A Paradigm Shift Significant changes have taken place in international on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the Programme of Work on conservation policies in the last few years. There is growing Protected Areas (PoWPA). It then evaluates the contribution awareness of the role of indigenous peoples and local that BCPs can make to improving ILCs’ participation in two communities (ILCs) in the management of protected areas types of protected areas, namely: collaboratively managed designated by governments, and equally, of the importance protected areas (CMPAs) and indigenous and community of sites and landscapes managed by communities themselves. conserved areas (ICCAs). The contribution of these communities and their traditional knowledge, innovations and practices (TK) to the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity in and around protected areas is gradually being recognized. Yet this paradigm shift 1.1 Protected Areas and Traditional Knowledge under the CBD: Making the Link from exclusionary protection towards inclusive and local participatory management models poses many challenges. The UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) situates Integrating governmental and private conservation institutions protected areas as a central instrument to achieve in situ and management practices with local values and customary conservation. As stated in Article 2 of the CBD, a protected governance of biodiversity is a complex task for all actors area is “a geographically defined area, which is designated or involved. It involves multifaceted issues of rights and regulated and managed to achieve specific conservation responsibilities, land tenure, contemporary and customary objectives”. More specifically, Article 8 of the CBD clearly calls knowledge, relevant institutions, and sharing of costs and on each Contracting Party to: 2 benefits. Bio-cultural community protocols (BCPs) can play (8a) Establish a system of protected areas or areas where a significant role at this interface of these issues, assisting special measures need to be taken to conserve biological ILCs to assert their bio-cultural values and rights to engage diversity; with protected area authorities and protect their TK. (8b) Develop, where necessary, guidelines for the selection, establishment and management of protected areas or areas This chapter briefly explores the interplay between protected where special measures need to be taken to conserve areas, ILCs and TK within the framework of the Convention biological diversity. 3 1 . Barbara Lassen, Programme Officer, Implementing the Biodiversity Convention, Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ); Gary Martin, PhD, Director of the Global Diversity Foundation, and Lecturer, Centre for Biocultural Diversity, School of Anthropology and Conservation, University of Kent; and Olivier Rukundo, Legal Research Fellow, Centre for International Sustainable Development Law, and Associate, Natural Justice: Lawyers for Communities and the Environment. 2. Kothari, Ashish, Protected areas and people: the future of the past, in: PARKS Vol. 17 No 2, 2008, p. 23-34. 3 . Article 8a and 8b, text of the Convention available at, http://www.cbd.int/convention/articles.shtml?a=cbd-08. 52

Select target paragraph3