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To browse Academia. This chapter attempts to examine whether livelihood patterns of indigenous people and local communities IPLC have contributed to the conservation and sustainable utilization of resources through a case study on the Sundarbans of Bangladesh. The Sundarbans is the largest mangrove ecosystem of the world enriched with high biodiversity. The combination of various types of ecosystems forest, coastal and wetland makes the Sundarbans home to several uniquely adapted aquatic and terrestrial flora and fauna.
These biotic along with other abiotic resources of the Sundarbans contribute directly or indirectly to the economy both at local and national levels. A significant number of local people have maintained their livelihoods by depending on these resources. This chapter, by identifying the Sundarbans Reserve Forest SRF area as a socio-ecological production landscape and seascape SEPLS , reveals that powerful agents at local, national and international levels have been extracting the resources of the Sundarbans beyond the sustainable limit.
On the contrary, the IPLCs are playing an important role in the restoration of natural resources through traditional knowledge and practices, which in turn can establish a sustainable resource management system.
This chapter also attempts to demonstrate that the institutional fragility, the existing nature of the power sharing arrangement, the nature of the political settlement and most importantly the exclusion of the IPLCs in the conservation and management process, have contributed to loss of biological diversity. Accordingly, this chapter presents empirical evidence showing that the local people of the Sundarbans have been practicing unique production methods that can significantly contribute to the revitalization and sustainable management of resources through symbiotic human-nature relationships.