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Dive into the research topics where John E. Parks is active.

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Featured researches published by John E. Parks.


Coastal Management | 2014

How Are Our MPAs Doing? Challenges in Assessing Global Patterns in Marine Protected Area Performance

Helen E. Fox; Jed L. Holtzman; Kelly M. Haisfield; Catherine McNally; Gonzalo Cid; Michael B. Mascia; John E. Parks; Robert S. Pomeroy

Without effective management, protected areas are unlikely to achieve the high expectations the conservation and development sectors have for them: conserving biodiversity and alleviating poverty. Numerous marine protected area (MPA) assessment initiatives have been developed at various spatial and temporal scales, including the guidebook How is your MPA doing? These management assessments have been useful to sites to clarify and evaluate their objectives, yet efforts to examine broader regional or global patterns in MPA performance are only beginning. The authors conducted exploratory trend analyses on How is your MPA doing? indicator data collected by 24 MPAs worldwide to identify challenges and areas for future work. Wide variability across sites with regard to the indicators examined and the constructs used to measure them prevented a true meta-analysis. Managers assessed biophysical indicators more often than socioeconomic and governance constructs. Investment by the conservation community to support collecting and reporting high-quality data at the site level would enable a better understanding of the variation in MPA performance, clarify the contribution of MPAs to both biodiversity conservation and poverty alleviation, and help drive better MPA performance. The absence of rigorous and consistent monitoring protocols and instruments and a platform to turn raw MPA monitoring data into actionable information is a critical but under-recognized obstacle to cross-project learning, comparative analyses, and adaptive resource management.


Coastal Management | 2015

Status and Priority Capacity Needs for Local Compliance and Community-Supported Enforcement of Marine Resource Rules and Regulations in the Coral Triangle Region

Robert S. Pomeroy; John E. Parks; Kathleen Reaugh-Flower; Mar Guidote; Hugh Govan; Scott Atkinson

Combating illegal and destructive resource exploitation in the Coral Triangle is central to ensuring the long-term effective management of fisheries, marine protected areas, and climate change adaptation efforts. This article presents results of an investigation of the perceived level of local compliance and enforcement with marine resource rules and regulations and evaluates the effectiveness or potential for community-supported enforcement efforts in the Coral Triangle region. The findings are consistent with those of the literature on compliance and enforcement that any compliance and enforcement system must not only use deterrence, but also be perceived by fishers as being legitimate, fair, accountable and equitable and the need for developing a personal morality and a social environment that supports compliance. There is an opportunity to strategically build on shared value and cultural norms that can promote collaborative fisheries management as a mechanism to increase compliance through non-coercive efforts. Strengthening the long-term capacity for consistent delivery of local support to marine management and enforcement will increase local compliance rates through time.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2017

A novel framework for analyzing conservation impacts: evaluation, theory, and marine protected areas.

Michael B. Mascia; Helen E. Fox; Louise Glew; Gabby N. Ahmadia; Arun Agrawal; Megan Barnes; Xavier Basurto; Ian D. Craigie; Emily S. Darling; Jonas Geldmann; David Gill; Susie Holst Rice; Olaf P. Jensen; Sarah E. Lester; Patrick McConney; Peter J. Mumby; Mateja Nenadovic; John E. Parks; Robert S. Pomeroy; Alan T. White

Environmental conservation initiatives, including marine protected areas (MPAs), have proliferated in recent decades. Designed to conserve marine biodiversity, many MPAs also seek to foster sustainable development. As is the case for many other environmental policies and programs, the impacts of MPAs are poorly understood. Social–ecological systems, impact evaluation, and common‐pool resource governance are three complementary scientific frameworks for documenting and explaining the ecological and social impacts of conservation interventions. We review key components of these three frameworks and their implications for the study of conservation policy, program, and project outcomes. Using MPAs as an illustrative example, we then draw upon these three frameworks to describe an integrated approach for rigorous empirical documentation and causal explanation of conservation impacts. This integrated three‐framework approach for impact evaluation of governance in social–ecological systems (3FIGS) accounts for alternative explanations, builds upon and advances social theory, and provides novel policy insights in ways that no single approach affords. Despite the inherent complexity of social–ecological systems and the difficulty of causal inference, the 3FIGS approach can dramatically advance our understanding of, and the evidentiary basis for, effective MPAs and other conservation initiatives.


Archive | 2004

How Is Your Mpa Doing?: A Guidebook of Natural and Social Indicators for Evaluating Marine Protected Areas Management Effectiveness

Robert S. Pomeroy; John E. Parks; Lani M. Watson


Marine Policy | 2007

Fish wars: Conflict and collaboration in fisheries management in Southeast Asia

Robert S. Pomeroy; John E. Parks; Richard B. Pollnac; Tammy Warner Campson; Emmanuel L. Genio; Cliff Marlessy; Elizabeth Holle; Michael D. Pido; Ayut Nissapa; Somsak Boromthanarat; Nguyen Thu Hue


Marine Policy | 2006

Farming the reef: is aquaculture a solution for reducing fishing pressure on coral reefs?

Robert S. Pomeroy; John E. Parks; Cristina M. Balboa


Archive | 2012

The Honolulu Strategy : a global framework for prevention and management of marine debris

Seba Shevealy; Kitty Courtney; John E. Parks


Marine Policy | 2017

An appeal for a code of conduct for marine conservation

Nathan J. Bennett; Lydia C. L. Teh; Yoshitaka Ota; Patrick Christie; Adam L. Ayers; Jon Day; Phil Franks; David Gill; Rebecca L. Gruby; John N. Kittinger; J. Zachary Koehn; Nai‘a Lewis; John E. Parks; Marjo Vierros; Tara S. Whitty; Aulani Wilhelm; Kim Wright; Jaime A. Aburto; Elena M. Finkbeiner; Carlos F. Gaymer; Hugh Govan; Noella J. Gray; Rebecca M. Jarvis; Maery Kaplan-Hallam; Terre Satterfield


Marine Policy | 2016

Drivers and impacts of fisheries scarcity, competition, and conflict on maritime security

Robert S. Pomeroy; John E. Parks; Karina Lorenz Mrakovcich; Christopher LaMonica


Marine Policy | 2017

Why people matter in ocean governance: Incorporating human dimensions into large-scale marine protected areas

Patrick Christie; Nathan J. Bennett; Noella J. Gray; T. 'Aulani Wilhelm; Nai‘a Lewis; John E. Parks; Natalie C. Ban; Rebecca L. Gruby; Lindsay Gordon; Jon Day; Sue Taei; Alan M. Friedlander

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Michael B. Mascia

Conservation International

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Helen E. Fox

World Wide Fund for Nature

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Jon Day

James Cook University

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David Gill

University of the West Indies

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Aulani Wilhelm

Conservation International

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