Ibbett Harriet, Dorward Leejiah, Jones Julia P G, Kohi Edward M, Dwiyahreni Asri A, Sankeni Stephen, Prayitno Karlina, Mchomvu Jesca, Kaduma Joseph, Saputra Andie Wijaya, Agustin Ika Yuni, Tryswidiarini Tyassanti, Mawenya Rose, Supriatna Jatna, St John Freya A V
School of Natural Sciences, Bangor University, Bangor, UK.
Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute (TAWIRI), Arusha, Tanzania.
Conserv Biol. 2025 Feb;39(1):e14332. doi: 10.1111/cobi.14332. Epub 2024 Jul 17.
Protected area management often depends heavily on law enforcement to secure compliance with rules. However, this can contribute to conflict between protected area authorities and local people, negatively affecting both human well-being and conservation outcomes. Compliance is affected by many factors, including whether those who enforce rules are perceived to do so fairly, as well as the perceived rule-related behavior of others. We used factorial survey experiments to explore how fair respondents living around protected areas in Indonesia and Tanzania perceive sanctions distributed by law enforcers to be. We presented scenarios to respondents to assess how crime type, offender characteristics, and corruption influenced their judgments regarding the fairness of administered sanctions. We also assessed how descriptive norms and corruption influenced individuals' willingness to obey protected area rules. Data were collected from 229 people in Indonesia and 217 in Tanzania. Results showed that in both locations, lawful sanctions, such as arrests or warnings, were perceived as fairer, and sanctions that involved corruption were perceived as least fair. Attitudes toward protected area rules, corruption, and descriptive norms all influenced people's willingness to comply, whereas multidimensional poverty did not. Our results highlight the need for conservation policy and practice to move beyond narratives that focus on the need for more law enforcement. To improve protected area compliance and secure better outcomes for people and nature, conservation must focus on ensuring the fair administration of rules and enhancing the legitimacy of rules themselves.
保护区管理通常严重依赖执法来确保规则的遵守。然而,这可能会导致保护区管理部门与当地居民之间的冲突,对人类福祉和保护成果产生负面影响。合规受到多种因素的影响,包括执行规则的人是否被认为执法公平,以及其他人对与规则相关行为的认知。我们使用析因调查实验来探究印度尼西亚和坦桑尼亚保护区周边的受访者认为执法人员实施的制裁有多公平。我们向受访者展示情景,以评估犯罪类型、犯罪者特征和腐败如何影响他们对所实施制裁公平性的判断。我们还评估了描述性规范和腐败如何影响个人遵守保护区规则的意愿。我们从印度尼西亚的229人和坦桑尼亚的217人那里收集了数据。结果表明,在这两个地区,诸如逮捕或警告等合法制裁被认为更公平,而涉及腐败的制裁被认为最不公平。对保护区规则、腐败和描述性规范的态度都影响了人们的遵守意愿,而多维贫困则没有。我们的研究结果凸显了保护政策和实践需要超越那些侧重于需要更多执法的说法。为了提高保护区的合规性并为人类和自然确保更好的成果,保护工作必须专注于确保规则的公平执行并增强规则本身的合法性。