From Cultural Landscape to Aspiring Geopark: 15 Years of Community-Based Landscape Tourism in Fengnan Village, Hualien County, Taiwan (2006–2021)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- How can the “know–cherish–show” community-based landscape tourism and interpretation model help to elicit the place of geodiversity and geotourism in their relation to other landscape resources?
- What are the lessons learned from the long-term institutional arrangement between primary and secondary stakeholders for the integrated landscape management in Fengnan Village?
- What is the role of the bridging stakeholder (NDHU) and of various landscape concepts applied as engagement techniques over the years?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Description of the Case Study Area: Fengnan Village, Hualien County, Taiwan
2.2. Definition of Terms and Concepts
2.3. Research Methodology
3. Results
3.1. Phase I: 2006–2011: Fengnan Aspiring Cultural Landscape
3.2. Phase II: 2011–2018: Cihalaay Cultural Landscape
3.3. Phase III: 2018–2021: Turtle River Aspiring Geopark
4. Discussion
4.1. “Know–Cherish–Show–Cherish Even More” of the Landscape Resources
4.2. Institutional Arrangement for Integrated Landscape Management
4.2.1. Primary Stakeholders
4.2.2. Secondary Stakeholders
4.2.3. Bridging Stakeholder(s)
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Short Biography of Authors
Phases | Phase I: 2006–2011 Fengnan Aspiring Cultural Landscape | Phase II: 2011–2018 Cihalaay Cultural Landscape | Phase III: 2018–2021 Turtle River Aspiring Geopark | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sub-phases | Participatory planning of community-based landscape tourism and place-based education for enhancing the cultural landscape awareness (2006–2008) | University-community partnership for capacity-building of interpretation skills for community-based landscape tourism (2009–2011) | Participatory planning, designation, management and monitoring of Cihalaay Cultural Landscape (2011–2018) | Participatory planning of community-based geotourism and geo-interpretation activities for rural community development within the Turtle River Aspiring Geopark (2018–2021) | |
Weekend community-based environmental education courses for Cilamitay Indigenous youth (2012–2016) | |||||
Landscape concept applied | Cultural landscape | + SEPL, the Satoyama Initiative + IUCN Category V Protected Landscape Cultural landscape | + Geopark SEPL, the Satoyama Initiative IUCN Category V Protected Landscape Cultural landscape | ||
Brief contents | Exploring Fengnan cultural landscape potential: landscape resources inventory (interviews, field surveys, workshops), capacity-building (by NDHU 1) of landscape interpretation skills of the local people, teachers and students, development of a place-based curriculum | Landscape resources inventory (field surveys, interviews, PPGIS 2), collaborative planning, official designation, management and monitoring of Cihalaay Cultural Landscape; conservation and sustainable use of Cihalaay SEPL 3; enhancing place-based education, community-based (from the elders to the youth) capacity-building of landscape interpretation skills | Exploring Fengnan geopark potential: landscape resources inventory (field surveys, workshops, ecosystem services analysis), capacity-building of geo-interpretation skills (by NGOs and academia), collaborative planning of three core geodiversity areas, geotourism operations by multi-stakeholder platform | ||
Stakeholders involved | Primary | Fengnan Community Development Association; Yongfeng Primary School | Cihalaay Cultural Landscape Management Committee; Fengnan Community Development Association | Ten 4 local organizations from Fengnan Village | |
Bridging | NDHU | NDHU | NDHU | ||
Secondary | HFDOFB 5; Ministry of Education; Council for Cultural Affairs (former Ministry of Culture) 6 | Hualien Cultural Affairs Bureau; HFDOFB | HFDOFB; Ninth River Management Office 7; other NGOs (incl. Geoparks Association of Taiwan) | ||
“Know”: understanding of landscape resources | How? Resources inventory tool | Interviews, field surveys, workshops | PPGIS, interviews, field surveys, workshops | Field surveys, workshops, ecosystem services analysis | |
What? Landscape resources | SCE 8: Cultural, production; B: Ecological; G: Scenic | SCE + B: Cultural, ecological and production values SCE, G: Historical, representative and rarity values | SCE: Provisioning and cultural services B: Provisioning, regulating and cultural services G + SCE: Regulating, provisioning and cultural services | ||
“Cherish”: appreciation of geodiversity among other landscape resources | G? Local perception of G | G: Scenic resource | G: Scenic resource, landscape background, source of drinking and irrigation water, and building material | G: Scenic resource, landscape background; regulating, provisioning and cultural services with connectivity to local livelihoods, local history and sense of place | |
“Show”: interpretation of landscape resources | How? Capacity-building | Community-(school)-university partnership: capacity-building of landscape interpretation skills (scenic emphasis) of the local people, teachers and students | Cilamitay elders and youth: capacity-building of landscape interpretation skills of the local Indigenous youth; interpretation of SEPL’s cultural, ecological, and production values | Local-expert knowledge for Fengnan geotourism development: capacity-building of geo-interpretation skills of the local people with the help of relevant experts (NGOs and academia) | |
What? Aspect of landscape tourism | Community-based cultural/rural (tribal) tourism, ecotourism | Community-based cultural/rural (tribal, heritage and agricultural) tourism, ecotourism, green products | Community-based landscape tourism with elements of cultural/rural (tribal, heritage and agricultural) tourism, ecotourism and geotourism | ||
Outcomes | Landscape resources | Initial community-based understanding, appreciation and development of interpretation skills in relation to scenic value of Fengnan landscape resources and the connectivity between them | Enhanced community-based understanding, appreciation and interpretation skills in relation to Cihalaay landscape resources with an emphasis on cultural, ecological and production values of SEPL as well as its conservation and sustainable use | Further enhanced community-based understanding, appreciation and interpretation skills in relation to landscape resources of the whole Fengnan Village with an emphasis on geodiversity value and its connectivity to socio-cultural-economic diversity | |
Institutional capacity | “Local-local” institutional capacity: community and school | “Local-governmental” institutional capacity: official collaboration with government agencies on protection of landscape resources in the name of Cihalaay Cultural Landscape (est. 2012) | “Multi-stakeholder” institutional capacity: establishment of the multi-stakeholder platform between 10 primary and 15 secondary stakeholders for collaborative governance of the Turtle River Aspiring Geopark | ||
Spatial scale (ha) | Fengnan Village (3500 ha) | Cihalaay Tribe (1000 ha) | Fengnan Village (3500 ha) | ||
Relevant publications | [36] | [38,59,60,61,62,63,64] | [29,65,66,67] |
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Lee, K.-C.; Karimova, P.G. From Cultural Landscape to Aspiring Geopark: 15 Years of Community-Based Landscape Tourism in Fengnan Village, Hualien County, Taiwan (2006–2021). Geosciences 2021, 11, 310. https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences11080310
Lee K-C, Karimova PG. From Cultural Landscape to Aspiring Geopark: 15 Years of Community-Based Landscape Tourism in Fengnan Village, Hualien County, Taiwan (2006–2021). Geosciences. 2021; 11(8):310. https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences11080310
Chicago/Turabian StyleLee, Kuang-Chung, and Paulina G. Karimova. 2021. "From Cultural Landscape to Aspiring Geopark: 15 Years of Community-Based Landscape Tourism in Fengnan Village, Hualien County, Taiwan (2006–2021)" Geosciences 11, no. 8: 310. https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences11080310
APA StyleLee, K. -C., & Karimova, P. G. (2021). From Cultural Landscape to Aspiring Geopark: 15 Years of Community-Based Landscape Tourism in Fengnan Village, Hualien County, Taiwan (2006–2021). Geosciences, 11(8), 310. https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences11080310