Wildlife-community conflicts in conservation areas in Kenya

被引:0
|
作者
Okech, Roselyne N. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Mem Univ Newfoundland, Sir Wilfred Grenfell Coll, Durban, South Africa
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
D0 [政治学、政治理论];
学科分类号
0302 ; 030201 ;
摘要
Kenya is rich in biological diversity to which wildlife resources contribute a significant proportion. Many of the regions with abundant and diverse wildlife communities remaining in East Africa are occupied by pastoralists. Recent studies show that the majority of the local people around protected areas have negative feelings about state policies and conservation programmes. The alienation of grazing land for the exclusive use of wildlife and tourists has a very direct impact upon the pastoralist communities, and prompts them to raise questions about African wildlife policy -as if it leads to a ` people versus animals' conflict. Nevertheless, large areas of pastoral rangelands have been expropriated for exclusive wildlife conservation use. This has commonly been justified by the argument that pastoralists overstock, overgraze and damage their range while wild animals are seen as existing in harmony with their surroundings. Wildlifehuman conflicts, therefore, are a consequence of the problem of resource utilisation in conservation areas. Such conflicts do not solve this problem, however, but adversely affect the biodiversity. They harm people and property, and lead to the retaliatory killing of wildlife in 82% of the protected areas. This paper reviews literature that seeks to address the important issue of wildlifehuman conflicts and also explores the aspects of pastoralism and conservation in Kenya.
引用
收藏
页码:65 / 80
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The importance of highlighting wildlife conservation success in urban areas
    Cepek, Jonathon D.
    HUMAN-WILDLIFE INTERACTIONS, 2023, 17 (01) : 138 - 141
  • [32] The role of institutions in community wildlife conservation in Zimbabwe
    Ntuli, Herbert
    Muchapondwa, Edwin
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE COMMONS, 2018, 12 (01): : 134 - 169
  • [33] Community Perceptions and Attitudes towards Conservation of Wildlife in
    Katswera, Joseph
    Mutekanga, Norah M.
    Twesigye, Charles K.
    JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE AND BIODIVERSITY, 2022, 6 (04) : 42 - 65
  • [34] A bioeconomic analysis of community wildlife conservation in Zimbabwe
    Ntuli, Herbert
    Muchapondwa, Edwin
    JOURNAL FOR NATURE CONSERVATION, 2017, 37 : 106 - 121
  • [35] Factors influencing community participation in wildlife conservation
    Mogomotsi, Patricia Kefilwe
    Stone, Lesego S.
    Mogomotsi, Goemeone E. J.
    Dube, Nqobizitha
    HUMAN DIMENSIONS OF WILDLIFE, 2020, 25 (04) : 372 - 386
  • [36] Assessing ecological knowledge, perceived agency, and motivations regarding wildlife and wildlife conservation in Samburu, Kenya
    Heisel, Sara E.
    King, Elizabeth
    Lekanta, Francis
    Lemoile, Francis
    Ryan, Camilla
    Lemerketo, Isaya
    Sundaresan, Siva
    Malsbury, Erin
    Bruyere, Brett
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2021, 262
  • [37] Community perceptions of wildlife conservation and tourism: A case study of communities adjacent to four protected areas in Zimbabwe
    Mutanga, Chiedza Ngonidzashe
    Vengesayi, Sebastian
    Gandiwa, Edson
    Muboko, Never
    TROPICAL CONSERVATION SCIENCE, 2015, 8 (02): : 564 - 582
  • [38] Conflicts over wildlife conservation: Learning from the reintroduction of beavers in Scotland
    Coz, Deborah M.
    Young, Juliette C.
    PEOPLE AND NATURE, 2020, 2 (02) : 406 - 419
  • [39] People and wildlife: Conflicts arising around the Bia Conservation Area in Ghana
    Harich, Franziska K.
    Treydte, Anna C.
    Sauerborn, Joachim
    Owusu, Erasmus H.
    JOURNAL FOR NATURE CONSERVATION, 2013, 21 (05) : 342 - 349
  • [40] Human–wildlife conflicts in the Sundarban Biosphere Reserve and the politics of forest conservation
    Amrita Sen
    DECISION, 2019, 46 : 321 - 333