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Topics
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Keynote
Speakers
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Ecotourism Planning in Protected
Areas
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Randall
Garcia
Coordinator of the Conservation
for Development Program
Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad,
Costa Rica
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Community
Involvement and Community based
Ecotourism
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James
Dion
Director of Ecotourism and Community
Development Program
RARE Center for Tropical Conservation
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Ecotourism
as a Business Activity
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Raul Arias
President
Canopy Tower, Panama
Joy
Grant
Vice-President & Managing
Director of the Atlantic Conservation
RegionThe Nature Conservancy
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Ecotourism
Policies at the National Level
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Ignacio
March
Director, Selva Maya Corridor
Conservation International -
Mexico
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Ecotourism
Policies at the Regional and
International Levels
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Stephen
Edwards
Americas Region Manager, Ecotourism
Department
Conservation International
Megan
Epler Wood
President
The International Ecotourism
Society
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Ecotourism
Planning in Protected Areas
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Randall
Garcia is a Forester who holds a Master's degree in
Ecoturism. His profesional experience has mainly been in
the areas of reforestation and planning and managing of
protected areas. Currently he is the Coordinator of the
Program for Conservation for Development of the Instituto
Nacional de Biodiversidad located in Costa Rica.

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Community
Involvement and Community based Ecotourism
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James
Dion is Director of the Ecotourism and Community Development
Program at the RARE Center for Tropical Conservation. Previous
to his work with the RARE Center he was the Ecotourism Director
at Pronatura Veracruz in Mexico. His interest in conserving
tropical biodiversity, and in linking ecotourism to conservation
and community development, is an outgrowth of his over 15
years experience as a river and outdoor guide/outfitter
working throughout North, Central and South America and
Europe.

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Ecotourism
as a Business Activity
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Raúl
Arias de Para studied economics in the United States
where he obtained a Master's degree in International Finance
from the University of Virginia. His experience spans from
banker and entrepeneur to politician and goverment excutive.
For the last ten years, he´s being involved with ecotourism,
bird research and conservation. He is memeber of the Smithsonian
Foundation, Audubon Society of Panamá, Friends of
the Harpey Eagle Foundation and Vice-President of the Sustainable
Development Association for El Valle of Antón. In
1999, he founded Canopy Tower, an eco-hotel located at an
old U.S. Air Force Radar Tower in the Soberania National
Park. Specializing in the observation of avifauna, Canopy
Tower has being recognized by many magazines and international
organizations as one of the best places in the world for
bird watching.
A.
Joy Grant dedicated Belizean environmentalist having
worked in the conservation field for over fourteen years.
She is currently Vice-President and Managing Director of
the Atlantic Conservation Region of The Nature Conservancy.
This Region comprises thirteen States in the Eastern United
States, the Caribbean, and Central America. She is also
a member of The Conservancy's Executive Leadership Team
that sets its overall strategic direction and establishes
organizational priorities. Prior to this, Mrs. Grant established,
developed and was Executive Director of Programme for Belize,
a conservation organization committed to the sustainable
development of Belize, which holds 268,000 acres of land
in trust. A. Joy Grant also served her country in the Foreign
Service as Counselor and Deputy Head of Mission at the Embassy
of Belize in Washington D.C. She also has over ten years
comprehensive experience in international and development
banking.

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Ecotourism
Policies at the National Level
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Ignacio
J. March Mifsut holds a Bachelor's degree in Biology
from Mexico City's Metropolitan University (1979?1984),
and a Masters degree in Wildlife Management and Conservation
at the Regional Program of the University at Heredia, Costa
Rica (1987-1990). From 1983 to 1999, he served as a senior
researcher at two Federal Research Institutes in Southern
Mexico. From 1999 to 2000, he coordinated Conservation International's
(CI) activities in the Lacandon Rainforest of Chiapas. Since
2001 to now, he is Director of the Maya Rainforest Corridor
at Conservation Interational - Mexico. Ignacio has dedicated
the past 18 years of his career to working for the protection
of the Maya Rainforest and its rich biodiversity as well
as in the improvement of the standard of living of local
people. He has captured and shared his work in conservation
and community developed through the publication of a book
and fifteen articles in several scientific journals and
magazines.

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Ecotourism
Policies at the Regional and International Levels
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Megan
Epler Wood is the President of The International Ecotourism
Society (TIES). Since 1990, she has worked with board members,
advisors, and members from around the world to shape an
organization that defines ecotourism as a tool to conserve
natural resources and provide sustainable development opportunity
worldwide. She has acted as spokesperson and lecturer on
these issues for TIES and instructor of customized training
workshops for governments, NGOs, and the private sector
in the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Trinidad, Tahiti, Fiji, Western
Samoa, Costa Rica, Kenya, and Brazil. She taught an annual
international workshop on Ecotourism Planning and Management
for The George Washington University for five years in Washington
D.C. during the 1990s. Epler Wood is a strong proponent
of guidelines and evaluation programs for the ecotourism
industry and a well-known analyst on the issue of ecotourism
certification. She was the editor of the first international
Ecotourism Guidelines for Nature Tour Operators in 1993.
She has researched how community participation can be improved
in ecotourism, and published an America Verde report on
this issue for the Latin America Division of The Nature
Conservancy in 1998, and was the guest editor of the 1999
issue of Cultural Survival Magazine on Ecotourism, Sustainable
Development and Cultural Survival. Epler Wood collaborated
with the United Nations Environment Programme on her latest
publication Ecotourism: Principles, Practices & Policies
for Sustainability. The text is due for publication in January
2002, and will be the premiere reference text during the
International Year of Ecotourism 2002 and beyond.
Stephen
Edwards is responsible for the management, development,
implementation, fundraising, and programmatic aspects of
Conservation International ecotourism projects in the Americas
Region. He works collaboratively with more than 12 of CI's
country programs in the Americas, as well as with other
CI programs around the world. Mr. Edwards has overseen and
supported ecotourism projects in Colombia, Bolivia, Peru,
Costa Rica, Brazil, Mexico, Guatemala, Panama, Ghana, Botswana,
China, and the Philippines, and has represented CI's ecotourism
programs at international conferences of governments and
non-governmental organizations. Mr. Edwards received his
Bachelor's degree in environmental studies and economics
from the University of California at Santa Cruz, and his
master's degree in resource recreation and tourism from
the University of Idaho. He recently published a report
for the OAS, an article in the Interamerican Investment
Corporation Annual Report, and has a chapter in print on
ecotourism policy in the Americas.

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List
of Guest Speakers
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Topics
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Guest
Speakers
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Ecotourism Planning in Protected Areas
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Seleni Matus
Programme for Belize and Mesoamerican Ecotourism Alliance
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Community
Involvement and Community based Ecotourism
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Juan
Carlos Martinez
Foundation Cocibolca, Nicaragua
Ricardo
Steiner and Rafael Sambula
PROLANSATE, Honduras
Luis
Arcos
Escudo Jaguar, Mexico
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Ecotourism
as a Business Activity
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Mick Flemming
Chaa Creek Cottages, Belize
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Ecotourism
Policies at the National Level
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Valerie
Woods
Protected Areas Conservation Trust, Belize
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Ecotourism
Policies at the Regional and International Levels
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Ronald
Sanabria
Rainforest Alliance, Costa Rica
Saul
Blanco
Association Alianza Verde, Guatemala
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