Publications by authors named "H Vacik"

Article Synopsis
  • Protected areas (PAs) offer numerous benefits but face challenges in meeting the diverse needs of stakeholders, highlighting the need for improved management strategies.
  • The "solutioning" process promotes peer-learning to better address these challenges, exemplified by the PANORAMA-Solutions for a Healthy Planet initiative, which features an interactive platform for sharing global PA management solutions.
  • PANORAMA supports adaptation of solutions to different contexts and emphasizes resilience and collaboration, aiming to enhance efficiency and equitable outcomes for nature conservation and sustainable development, but more research is necessary to evaluate its effectiveness in improving PA management.
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Growing resource demands by humans, invasive species, natural hazards, and a changing climate have created broad-scale impacts and the need for broader-extent conservation activities that span ownerships and even political borders. Implementing regional-scale conservation brings great challenges, and learning how to overcome these challenges is essential for maintaining biodiversity (i.e.

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Programme-based Planning of Natural Resources (PBPNR) is an evolving planning frame for solving complex land use, environmental and forest management problems within hierarchically administrated funding and decision-making schemes. PBPNR acknowledges that an effective planning process requires the combined consideration of environmental, technological, economic and socio-political factors. To reach acceptability, commitment and operability, PBPNR processes need to foster collaboration and learning.

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The interpretation and communication of fire danger warning levels based on fire weather index values are critical for fire management activities. A number of different indices have been developed for various environmental conditions, and many of them are currently applied in operational warning systems. To select an appropriate combination of such indices to work in different ecoregions in mountainous, hilly and flat terrain is challenging.

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Criteria and indicators assessment is one of the ways to evaluate management strategies for mountain watersheds. One framework for this, Integrated Watershed Management (IWM), was employed at Chittagong Hill Tracts region of Bangladesh using a multi-criteria analysis approach. The IWM framework, consisting of the design and application of principles, criteria, indicators, and verifiers (PCIV), facilitates active participation by diverse professionals, experts, and interest groups in watershed management, to explicitly address the demands and problems to measure the complexity of problems in a transparent and understandable way.

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