IDRC. Regional Office for Southeast and East Asia, Economy and Environment Program for Southeast Asia2007-11-132002-06-142007-11-132001http://hdl.handle.net/10625/33525Full text version of this study is available as an EEPSEA research report: Policy options for Cambodia's Ream National Park : a stakeholder and economic analysisReam National Park covers 34,000 hectares of diverse landscapes that include the Prek Toek Sap estuary, low-lying mountains, miles of mangroves, seagrass beds, coral reefs and parts of two islands. It is the scene of a daily struggle between conflicting interests of park authorities, local communities, and commercial fishermen and loggers. Many policymakers surmise that the villagers of Ream are too uneducated to grasp the concepts of costs and benefits. The 3-page paper reviews pathways to conservation or destruction, including an environmental economics assessment of benefits (who gains?).4 p. (unpaged) : ill.application/pdfenCHINATOURISMCOMMUNITY PARTICIPATIONMANGROVESCOMMUNAL LANDDEFORESTATIONNATIONAL PARKS AND RESERVESEXPLOITATIONENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICSCAMBODIAFAR EAST ASIAPark for the people, not for the powerful : the case for protecting Cambodia's Ream National ParkIDRC-Related Report