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Environmental planning and management for the Assarawat highland region of south-western Saudi Arabia: the traditional versus the professional approach

Author

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  • Mohammed Abdullah Eben Saleh

    (King Saud University)

Abstract

The environmental planning and management of the Assarawat highlands of south-western Saudi Arabia are currently confronted by difficult problems. Deforestation is caused either by natural or intentional forces. Natural factors are limited to lightning fire and drought, while intentional forces include vandalism caused by the burning or cutting of preserved forests. Such vandalism continues despite the tremendous efforts of afforestation and preservation by several government agencies, especially the Ministry of Agriculture and Water, the National Commission for Wildlife Conservation and Development and by the municipalities of the cities and towns in the region. For centuries, local inhabitants of the Assarawat highlands have successfully established environmental planning and management strategies which balanced the settlements' growth and natural resource uses according to Islamic laws, and the tribal self-government of each settlement and tribal region. Following the establishment of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in 1932, the land management system started to change from tribal-based, where every tribe used to manage its local territory, to State authority. The creation of the State witnessed the unification of various fragmented tribes of Saudi Arabia into one government. This meant that environmental planning and management moved from local/regional towards a national control. This investigation proposes that the local/regional planning and management practised by the tribes could be viably utilized today. As in the past, the implementation of these practices could protect the natural environment of the locality and region and regularize their exploitation rationally, as long as vernacular people implement them. Today environmental planning and management need to be based on strategies of local requirements that enable the indigenous people to plan and manage the use of the resources.

Suggested Citation

  • Mohammed Abdullah Eben Saleh, 2000. "Environmental planning and management for the Assarawat highland region of south-western Saudi Arabia: the traditional versus the professional approach," Environment Systems and Decisions, Springer, vol. 20(2), pages 123-139, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:envsyd:v:20:y:2000:i:2:d:10.1023_a:1006708110093
    DOI: 10.1023/A:1006708110093
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