Presentation made at the Sustainable Tourism in Small Island Developing States conference, 23-24 November 2017, Seychelles. A partnership of the Seychelles Sustainable Tourism Foundation, IUCN WCPA Tourism and Protected Areas Specialist Group, University of Seychelles, Paris Tourism Sorbonne (IREST), and Global Sustainable Tourism Council.
1. Using SOCMON as a Tool to Involve Islanders in Develop-
ing Community Based Tourism and provide need
based training to foster product Enhancement
• Vineeta Hoon
• Centre for Action Research on
Environment Science & Society
4. • Live in Biodiversity Hotspots - Coral reefs, Seagrass Mangroves
ecosystems.
• Anthropogenic pressures: High level of dependence on coastal and
Marine resources.
• Poverty and Limited employment opportunities
• Low social resilience
• The divide between local peoples knowledge of marine resources and
ecology and formal management
• issues related to climate change, ocean acidification and global warming
• Issues related to garbage disposal and bad fishing practices in some
areas
Key Learnings
Island Communities
5. • Once a potential for tourism is speculated well established
Hotel international chains move in develop the product and
take over the market
• Local community who do not have the wherewithal of
developing and marketing a product or capital to invest are left
behind and treated as nuisances that have to be dealt with.
• The only jobs they can get are the ones lowest in the resort
hierarchy.
• Land speculation and land grabbing which leads to the
islanders losing their only valuable resource for the next
generations.
• They have to deal with the disposal of tons of plastic garbage
that tourism inevitably brings.
The issue
6. The issue
• The resort owners hoteliers usually from outside do not understand or care
about the needs of the local community.
• For tourism to flourish equitably and sustainably an interface is needed to
provide a level playing field where both parties that are needed to develop
tourism can complement and work with each other
7. • SocMon is a set of guidelines for establishing a socioeconomic monitoring
programme at a coastal management site Level.
• The guidelines provide a prioritized list of socioeconomic variables useful to coastal
managers and other developers
• They are not rigid and can be tailored to each sites needs and purposes.
SOCMON as the interface
12. • listing whats needed to reach
the goal
• listing whats needed to change
to achieve the goal and
articulating what needs to be
done to bring that change
• Listing training needs
The Way Forward
Doing: Once a livelihood is chosen
Goal: Tourism to protect Natural and Cultural Heritage
• Strengths & Opportunities:
man power, own land,
marine area knowledge,
cultural practices
• Threats & Weakness:
Pollution, Marketing ,
Financial capital,
Conservation, Education, Enterprise, Livelihood
Suggested Solutions
• Govt Enabling Agency improve
transportation services, agree to co-
management of marine areas, support
LLMAs, protect land ownership/sales
• Outside expert: Marketing, Management
Training by doing, licences, certification
• Islanders Build capacity as owners, hosts,
guides and managers over time
Together deciding on the eco-solutions for
architecture, building materials for resort