Anne-Maree Schwarz
WorldFish
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Featured researches published by Anne-Maree Schwarz.
Environmental Conservation | 2011
Kimberley Warren-Rhodes; Anne-Maree Schwarz; Linda Ng Boyle; Joelle Albert; Stephen Suti Agalo; Regon Warren; Andrew Bana; Chris Paul; Ringo Kodosiku; Wilko Bosma; Patrik Rönnbäck; Beatrice Crona; Norm Duke
Mangroves are an imperilled biome whose protection and restoration through payments for ecosystem services (PES) can contribute to improved livelihoods, climate mitigation and adaptation. Interviews with resource users in three Solomon Islands villages suggest a strong reliance upon mangrove goods for subsistence and cash, particularly for firewood, food and building materials. Village-derived economic data indicates a minimum annual subsistence value from mangroves of US
PLOS ONE | 2015
Reuben Sulu; Hampus Eriksson; Anne-Maree Schwarz; Neil L. Andrew; Grace Orirana; Meshach Sukulu; Janet Oeta; Daykin Harohau; Stephen Sibiti; Andrew Toritela; Douglas J. Beare
345–1501 per household. Fish and nursery habitat and storm protection were widely recognized and highly valued mangrove ecosystem services. All villagers agreed that mangroves were under threat, with firewood overharvesting considered the primary cause. Multivariate analyses revealed village affiliation and religious denomination as the most important factors determining the use and importance of mangrove goods. These factors, together with gender, affected users’ awareness of ecosystem services. The importance placed on mangrove services did not differ significantly by village, religious denomination, gender, age, income, education or occupation. Mangrove ecosystem surveys are useful as tools for raising community awareness and input prior to design of PES systems. Land tenure and marine property rights, and how this complexity may both complicate and facilitate potential carbon credit programmes in the Pacific, are discussed.
International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability | 2017
Boru Douthwaite; J Marina Apgar; Anne-Maree Schwarz; Simon Attwood; Sonali Senaratna Sellamuttu; Terry Clayton
Inshore marine resources play an important role in the livelihoods of Pacific Island coastal communities. However, such reliance can be detrimental to inshore marine ecosystems. Understanding the livelihoods of coastal communities is important for devising relevant and effective fisheries management strategies. Semi-structured household interviews were conducted with householders in Langalanga Lagoon, Solomon Islands, to understand household livelihoods and resource governance in fishing-dependent communities. Households were engaged in a diverse range of livelihoods. Fishing, shell money production and gardening were the most important livelihoods. Proximity to an urban centre influenced how households accessed some livelihoods. Perceptions of management rules varied and different reasons were cited for why rules were broken, the most common reason being to meet livelihood needs. Current models of inshore small-scale fisheries management that are based on the notion of community-based resource management may not work in locations where customary management systems are weak and livelihoods are heavily reliant on marine resources. An important step for fisheries management in such locations should include elucidating community priorities through participatory development planning, taking into consideration livelihoods as well as governance and development aspirations.
Global Environmental Change-human and Policy Dimensions | 2011
Anne-Maree Schwarz; Christophe Béné; Gregory Bennett; Delvene Boso; Zelda Hilly; Chris Paul; Ronnie Posala; Stephen Sibiti; Neil L. Andrew
ABSTRACT There have been repeated calls for a ‘new professionalism’ for carrying out agricultural research for development since the 1990s. At the centre of these calls is a recognition that for agricultural research to support the capacities required to face global patterns of change and their implications on rural livelihoods, requires a more systemic, learning focused and reflexive practice that bridges epistemologies and methodologies. In this paper, we share learning from efforts to mainstream such an approach through a large, multi-partner CGIAR research program working in aquatic agricultural systems. We reflect on four years of implementing research in development (RinD), the program’s approach to the new professionalism. We highlight successes and challenges and describe the key characteristics that define the approach. We conclude it is possible to build a program on a broader approach that embraces multidisciplinarity and engages with stakeholders in social-ecological systems. Our experience also suggests caution is required to ensure there is the time, space and appropriate evaluation methodologies in place to appreciate outcomes different to those to which conventional agricultural research aspires.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Joelle Albert; Doug Beare; Anne-Maree Schwarz; Simon Albert; Regon Warren; James Teri; Faye Siota; Neil L. Andrew
Environmental development | 2013
Pierre-Yves Hardy; Christophe Béné; Luc Doyen; Anne-Maree Schwarz
Archive | 2011
Hugh Govan; Anne-Maree Schwarz; D. Boso
Marine Policy | 2014
Nathan Cleasby; Anne-Maree Schwarz; Michael Phillips; Chris Paul; Jharendu Pant; Janet Oeta; Tim Pickering; Alex Meloty; Michael Laumani; Max Kori
Global Environmental Change-human and Policy Dimensions | 2014
K. E. Abernethy; Örjan Bodin; Per Olsson; Z. Hilly; Anne-Maree Schwarz
Archive | 2013
Hugh Govan; Anne-Maree Schwarz; Daykin Harohau; Janet Oeta