Outcomes of community engagement in community-based natural resource management programmes
Date
2006
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Volume Title
Publisher
Programme for Land and Agrarian Studies, University of the Western Cape, Cape Town, ZA
Abstract
Although the last century has witnessed exciting strategies in resource management in the form of community-based natural resource management (CBNRM), these developments are more incremental than revolutionary. CBNRM falls into the wider development debate on the role of the state, particularly in the context of the development of Africa. Stakeholders, located at different levels along the international, national and local continuum, have differing views on this debate based on their experience and ideologies. These positions determine the form and practice of CBNRM, through negotiation, contests, collusions and intrigue. Case studies of the implementation of CBNRM in Zimbabwe and Botswana show both opportunities in terms of community benefit and wildlife conservation, and risks in the form of domination of communities by NGOs, the state and the private sector.
Description
"Debating land reform, natural resources and poverty"
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Policy Brief
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Text
Keywords
PROGRAMME EVALUATION, COMMUNITY-BASED NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT, COMMUNAL LAND, NATIONAL PARKS, CONSERVATION OF NATURE, COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT, COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION, SOUTHERN AFRICA