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Received: 6 December 2018  Revised: 21 February 2019  Accepted: 21 February 2019
          DOI: 10.1111/conl.12640

          LETTER



          Local support for conservation is associated with perceptions of

          good governance, social impacts, and ecological effectiveness



          Nathan J. Bennett 1,2,3     Antonio Di Franco 3        Antonio Calò 3     Elizabeth Nethery 4
          Federico Niccolini 5   Marco Milazzo  6,7    Paolo Guidetti 3,7



          1 Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries and
                                          Abstract
          Institute for Resources, Environment and
          Sustainability, University of British  Local support is important for the longevity of conservation initiatives. The literature
          Columbia, Vancouver, Canada     suggests that perceptions of ecological effectiveness, social impacts, and good gov-
          2 Center for Ocean Solutions, Stanford  ernance will influence levels of local support for conservation. This paper examines
          University, Monterrey, California
                                          these relationships using data from a survey of small-scale fishermen in 11 marine pro-
          3 CNRS, ECOSEAS Lab., Université Côte
                                          tected areas from six countries in the Mediterranean Sea. The survey queried small-
          d'Azur, Nice, France
          4 School of Population and Public Health,  scale fishermen regarding perceptions and support for conservation. We constructed
          University of British Columbia, Vancouver,  composite scores for three categories of perceptions—ecological effectiveness, social
          Canada
                                          impacts, and good governance—and tested the relationship with levels of support
          5 Department of Economics and Management,
                                          using ordinal regression models. While all three factors were positively correlated
          University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy
          6 Department of Earth and Marine Sciences,  with support for conservation, perceptions of good governance and social impacts
          University of Palermo, Palermo, Italy  were stronger predictors of increasing support. These findings suggest that employ-
          7
           CoNISMa (National Interuniversity  ing good governance processes and managing social impacts may be more important
          Consortium of Marine Sciences), Rome, Italy
                                          than ecological effectiveness for maintaining local support for conservation.
          Correspondence
          Nathan J.Bennett,Institute for the Oceans  KEYWORDS
          and Fisheriesand Institute for Resources,  conservation, good governance, management effectiveness, marine protected areas, perceptions, small-
          Environment and Sustainability,University of  scale fisheries, social impacts
          British Columbia,AERL Building,429-2202
          Main Mall,Vancouver,BC V6T 1Z4,Canada.
          Email: nathan.bennett@ubc.ca

          Funding information
          European Regional Development Fund; Euro-
          pean Territorial Cooperation Programme MED


          1   INTRODUCTION                                    effectiveness and long-term persistence of conservation pro-
                                                              grams and initiatives (Gelcich & Donlan 2015; Rohe, Aswani,
          Conservation initiatives—such as marine and terrestrial  Schlüter, & Ferse, 2017; Sorice & Donlan 2015; Voyer, Glad-
          protected areas—are often situated near resource-based  stone, & Goodall, 2015). The longevity of conservation initia-
          communities whose livelihoods and well-being depend on  tives may be particularly important for successfully achieving
          the local environment. The ongoing support from these local  the aims of conservation, as ecological benefits are related to
          communities and constituents can be crucial for the short-term  the time since establishment (Claudet et al., 2008; Edgar et al.,



          This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original
          work is properly cited.
          © 2019 The Authors. Conservation Letters published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
          Conservation Letters. 2019;e12640.                                       wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/conl  1of10
          https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12640
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