Protected Areas and Tourism in Lao PDR : Policy Note

Conservation and tourism contribute to greener economic growth in many countries. Although protected areas have often been viewed as land excluded from economic development for the purposes of environmental conservation, many countries have realize...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Policy Note
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Vientiane 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/885591616734268983/Green-Growth-Advisory-Program-for-Lao-PDR-Protected-Areas-and-Tourism-in-Lao-PDR-Policy-Note
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35345
id okr-10986-35345
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-353452021-04-23T14:02:20Z Protected Areas and Tourism in Lao PDR : Policy Note World Bank TOURISM ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION NATIONAL PROTECTED AREA ECOTOURISM WILDLIFE TOURISM SUSTAINABLE LAND MANAGEMENT FOREST MANAGEMENT Conservation and tourism contribute to greener economic growth in many countries. Although protected areas have often been viewed as land excluded from economic development for the purposes of environmental conservation, many countries have realized their powerful economic potential through tourism and visitation. In fact, tourism has been an integral part of protected area management since the beginning of their conception. If appropriate policy and technical capacity are established, most protected area professionals argue that both ecosystem protection and tourism development can be implemented concurrently without undermining the objectives of either activity. Lao PDR policy makers have recognized the economic potential of protected areas and seek to develop these sites as a focus of the NSEDP 2015-2019 and the 2030 National Green Growth Strategy, given the globally unique natural heritage of Lao PDR. Not only does tourism in protected areas provide employment opportunities to youth and ethnic peoples, but tourism is also one of the few sectors with high female labor participation above parity (including in Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines and Thailand).7 Many jobs in protected area management and tourism operations often do not require high levels of education, providing lower barriers to acquire employment for poor communities with properly supported with policy and regulations. Furthermore, these jobs and incomes can often be more sustainable than those in mining or timber activities due to boom and bust cycles from extractive industries. Finally, tourism jobs are often safer than comparable extractive jobs. 2021-03-31T17:34:58Z 2021-03-31T17:34:58Z 2021-03-26 Policy Note http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/885591616734268983/Green-Growth-Advisory-Program-for-Lao-PDR-Protected-Areas-and-Tourism-in-Lao-PDR-Policy-Note http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35345 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Vientiane Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Note East Asia and Pacific Lao People's Democratic Republic
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic TOURISM
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
NATIONAL PROTECTED AREA
ECOTOURISM
WILDLIFE TOURISM
SUSTAINABLE LAND MANAGEMENT
FOREST MANAGEMENT
spellingShingle TOURISM
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
NATIONAL PROTECTED AREA
ECOTOURISM
WILDLIFE TOURISM
SUSTAINABLE LAND MANAGEMENT
FOREST MANAGEMENT
World Bank
Protected Areas and Tourism in Lao PDR : Policy Note
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Lao People's Democratic Republic
description Conservation and tourism contribute to greener economic growth in many countries. Although protected areas have often been viewed as land excluded from economic development for the purposes of environmental conservation, many countries have realized their powerful economic potential through tourism and visitation. In fact, tourism has been an integral part of protected area management since the beginning of their conception. If appropriate policy and technical capacity are established, most protected area professionals argue that both ecosystem protection and tourism development can be implemented concurrently without undermining the objectives of either activity. Lao PDR policy makers have recognized the economic potential of protected areas and seek to develop these sites as a focus of the NSEDP 2015-2019 and the 2030 National Green Growth Strategy, given the globally unique natural heritage of Lao PDR. Not only does tourism in protected areas provide employment opportunities to youth and ethnic peoples, but tourism is also one of the few sectors with high female labor participation above parity (including in Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines and Thailand).7 Many jobs in protected area management and tourism operations often do not require high levels of education, providing lower barriers to acquire employment for poor communities with properly supported with policy and regulations. Furthermore, these jobs and incomes can often be more sustainable than those in mining or timber activities due to boom and bust cycles from extractive industries. Finally, tourism jobs are often safer than comparable extractive jobs.
format Policy Note
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Protected Areas and Tourism in Lao PDR : Policy Note
title_short Protected Areas and Tourism in Lao PDR : Policy Note
title_full Protected Areas and Tourism in Lao PDR : Policy Note
title_fullStr Protected Areas and Tourism in Lao PDR : Policy Note
title_full_unstemmed Protected Areas and Tourism in Lao PDR : Policy Note
title_sort protected areas and tourism in lao pdr : policy note
publisher World Bank, Vientiane
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/885591616734268983/Green-Growth-Advisory-Program-for-Lao-PDR-Protected-Areas-and-Tourism-in-Lao-PDR-Policy-Note
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35345
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