Developing a predictive understanding of landscape importance to the Punan-Pelancau of East Kalimantan, Borneo.
Cunliffe R.N. ; Lynam, T.J. ; Sheil, D. 等
Ambio, 36(7): 593-9.
In order for local community views to be incorporated into new
development initiatives, their perceptions need to be clearly understood
and documented in a format that is readily accessible to planners and
developers. The current study sought to develop a predictive
understanding of how the Punan Pelancau community, living in a forested
landscape in East Kalimantan, assigns importance to its surrounding
landscapes and to present these perceptions in the form of maps. The
approach entailed the iterative use of a combination of participatory
community evaluation methods and more formal modeling and geographic
information system techniques. Results suggest that landscape importance
is largely dictated by potential benefits, such as inputs to production,
health, and houses. Neither land types nor distance were good predictors
of landscape importance. The grid-cell method, developed as part of the
study, appears to offer a simple technique to capture and present the
knowledge of local communities, even where their relationship to the
land is highly complex, as was the case for this particular community.