Dr. Campbell's
research focuses on policies and projects designed to
reconcile wildlife (and other resource) conservation
with socio-economic development, primarily in rural
areas of developing countries. She studies the process
of policy making, the transition from policy to practice,
and the impacts of (and responses to) implementation
at the local level. At the policy making stage, she
examines how the interaction of science and other values,
and how negotiations between stakeholders (local people,
bilateral agencies, NGOs, and 'experts') inform the
process. Specific policies include participatory development,
community based conservation, sustainable use, and ecotourism.
A major research focus has been on marine turtle conservation
policy, and its implementation in Latin America and
the Caribbean. Dr. Campbell is more generally interested
in research methodology, including qualitative methods,
inter-disciplinary research, and ethics.
This
Sawyer Seminar, funded by the Mellon Foundation, includes a year-long
series of working group meetings
and mini-conferences on the central theme of globalization and
the land. It is hosted by UNC's Center for Global Initiatives.