CLC’s involvement began with a focus on the imperiled nesting beaches for the olive ridley sea turtles and has evolved to helping the community develop a sustainable development plan which, in turn, will help the turtles. Conservation Law Clinic students have been involved in multiple aspects of our Costa Rica projects.
The article was published in Sustainability, an international peer-reviewed journal focused on sustainable development issues around the globe.
Article: https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/14/24/16982
Abstract:
The town of Nosara on Costa Rica’s Nicoya peninsula is home to a vibrant community of diverse residents and is adjacent to an important turtle nesting site. However, tensions between lifelong residents, more recent transplants, visitors, and developers have increased as more of the world discovers this once-isolated haven. Climate change, income inequality, and alienation from a distant government apparatus have further complicated effective land-use planning and fractured social cohesion. Using a mixed-method approach of in-depth interviews (n = 67), Q methodology (n = 79), and public deliberation (n = 88), we explored residents’ priorities for the future of their town. The results indicate four different perspectives on Nosara’s future. Despite the tensions among those four perspectives, they show consensus on one overarching community issue: the need for a sustainable development plan. The case also shows how Q-methodology can assist scholars and practitioners who embrace participatory approaches to policy development and conflict resolution in the environmental arena.