2026 Apr 2

深耕里山倡議接軌國際 東華大學獲聘國際里山倡議指導委員會委員

國立東華大學再度於國際生物多樣性治理領域傳來捷報!東華大學國際里山倡議聯絡人孫夏天博士於近日接獲「國際里山倡議夥伴關係網絡(IPSI)」秘書處通知,東華大學已獲選成為新一期的IPSI指導委員會(Steering Committee, SC)成員。這是IPSI成立16年以來,臺灣首次獲聘為該委員會委員。此項任命訂於2026年3月3-5日在厄瓜多爾里奧班巴(Riobamba)召開的第十屆IPSI全球大會(IPSI-10)中正式宣告並通過,孫夏天博士已於4日代表東華參加大會並接受任命。

躋身核心決策圈:IPSI指導委員會之意義

此次成功獲選,東華大學永續發展中心里山里海辦公室執行長、同時也是環境暨海洋學院兼任助理教授孫夏天博士扮演關鍵角色。孫博士表示,國際里山倡議夥伴關係網絡(IPSI)自2010年成立,是落實聯合國生物多樣性公約「人與自然和諧共生」願景的最重要國際平台之一。而19位成員組成的指導委員會(SC),作為其推動執行與決策核心,負責指導全球348位IPSI成員夥伴關係的日常運作、審核新會員資格、並為全球大會提供策略性建議。東華大學永續發展中心主任李俊鴻教授表示,東華大學此次獲選,象徵校方在推動生物多樣性保育、里山里海保全活用的長期努力,獲得國際學術與政策界的雙重認可,未來將代表臺灣在該國際組織中發揮更多實質的影響力與決策建議權。

知識燈塔:接軌國際與培育人才

國立東華大學以「花東縱谷的知識燈塔」自我期許。在徐輝明校長引領下,校方積極吸納國際級專業人才,致力於將學術研究和社會參與轉化為具體的政策貢獻。孫博士表示,未來將透過IPSI指導委員會的席位,持續強化臺灣與全球生物多樣性網絡的連結,為臺灣在國際環境治理中爭取更多發聲和貢獻的機會。徐校長表示,東華大學未來將持續投入永續發展與生物多樣性保育工作,呼應聯合國永續發展目標(UN SDGs)及昆明-蒙特婁全球生物多樣性框架(KM-GBF),為臺灣社會及國際社群培育具備世界觀的新世代人才。


作者: imcplan 001 2026 Mar 26
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作者: imcplan 001 2026 Mar 26
【榮耀時刻】賀!臺灣里山永續創新聯盟多位會員夥伴 榮獲農業部首批「保育共生地」認證
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Written by Mei-Hui Chen. Image credit: Visitors playing with leaf boats in the Laonong stream – a traditional childhood game of the Luigui locals. Photo courtesy of the author. What is an Ecotourism Destination Marketing Organisation (DMO)?  Satoyama-satoumi landscapes and seascapes are ideal destinations for community-based ecotourism. For the past 20 years, Taiwan has been actively promoting ecotourism in rural areas. It aims to support biodiversity conservation, preserve cultural heritage, and promote sustainable local livelihoods. Over time, however, it has become clear that the diversity of tours and products, as well as the marketing capacity of a single community, is rather limited. This has affected the overall progress of community-based ecotourism development in the country. To address this challenge, the ecotourism trend has been gradually shifting from individual communities to the promotion of regional partnership networks in recent years. This innovative shift raises an important question: how can stakeholders —including communities, government agencies, and tourism professionals—effectively coordinate to link ecotourism destinations, facilitate exchanges across itineraries, products, services, talents, space, and expertise, and jointly build a community-based ecotourism industry? This is when ecotourism DMOs (Destination Marketing Organisations) can be a good solution. DMO s serve as a mechanism that engages government agencies, local stakeholders, and tourism professionals to collaborate on achieving a shared vision for tourism development. It integrates natural, human, administrative, financial, and other types of available resources to support a long-term goal of sustainable local development. DMOs need to coordinate across multiple stakeholders and have the ability to interpret data and manage knowledge to play a strategic role in the fiercely competitive tourism market. In general, DMOs are ‘integrated leaders’ of tourism destinations and need to work at multiple levels, including strategy, governance, branding, marketing, and sustainability, to achieve overall development of regional ecotourism. Since the introduction of the Community Forestry project in 2002, our team from the National Pingtung University of Science and Technology has been supporting satoyama and satoumi communities in southern Taiwan and nationwide in the development of their community-based ecotourism DMOs. The story of the Shih-ba-luo-han-shan Forest Reserve and its community efforts is one of the brightest examples of Taiwan’s regional DMOs to date. Community Participation in the Management of the Shih–ba–luo–han-shan Forest Reserve The Shih-ba-luo-han-shan mountain range is located in Luigui District, Kaohsiung City, southern Taiwan. It consists of several kilometres of independent peaks with unique shapes, forming many U-shaped valleys, canyons, peaks, meanders, and dry valleys. The Forestry and Nature Conservation Agency (FANCA), Ministry of Agriculture, established the Shih-ba-luo-han-shan Forest Reserve in 1992 to protect this unique geo-ecological landscape. This beautiful mountain range had always had an important collective memory in the eyes of the locals. However, after the establishment of the nature reserve, the local people lost access to it, which led to opposition and conflict with the management authority.
Show More

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