African wildlife & livelihoods : the promise and performance of community conservation
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
African wildlife & livelihoods : the promise and performance of community conservation
Heinemann , James Currey, c2001
- us : cloth
- us : pbk
- uk : cloth
- uk : pbk
- Other Title
-
African wildlife and livelihoods
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Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto Universityアフリカ専攻
us : cloth519.84||Hul01097385,
us : pbk519.84||Hul01017666 -
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Note
Bibliography: p. [298]-329
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
uk : cloth ISBN 9780852554135
Description
This volume examines just how successful community-based conservation approaches have been in their twin objectives of conserving African environments and improving rural livelihoods.
Table of Contents
- Part 1 Setting the scene: conservation and communities, William Adams and D. Hulme
- community conservation from concept to practice - a practical framework, Edmund Barrow and Marshall Murphree. Part 2 Conservation policies and institutions: the evolution of policy in Namibia and Zimbabwe, Brian Jones and M. Murphree
- community conservation in East Africa, Edmund Barrow et al
- the political economy of community conservation policy in Mozambique, Simon Anstey
- reforming a conservation bureaucracy in Tanzania, Patrick Bergin. Part 3 Parks and people revisited -community conservation as projected area outreach: Lake Mburo National Park, Uganda, D. Hulme and Mark Infield
- Mgahinga Gorilla National Park, Uganda, William Adams and Mark Infield
- Tarangire National Park, Tanzania (1992-97), Kadzo Kangwana and Rafael Ole Mako. Part 4 Developing management: the evolution of a community-based approach to wildlife management at Kunene, Namibia, Brian Jones
- community conservation and private business (Mahenye, Zimbabwe), M. Murphree
- community conservation designed by the community (Mozambique), Simon Anstey and Camila de Sousa. Part 5 Economics, incentives and institutional change: the nature of benefits and the benefits of nature, Lucy Emerton
- economic incentives and institutional change in Zimbabwe, Ivan Bond
- committees, rights, costs and benefits (Zimbabwe's CAMPFIRE programme), James Murombedzi. Part 6 Measuring and monitoring conservation: can community conservation strategies meet the conservation agenda?, Kadzo Kangwana
- participatory natural resource management - implications for conservation, Russell Taylor. Part 7 Conclusions: the future of community conservation
- community conservation and beyond.
- Volume
-
uk : pbk ISBN 9780852554142
Description
This volume examines just how successful community-based conservation approaches have been in their twin objectives of conserving African environments and improving rural livelihoods.
Recent conservation policies in Africa have followed three main principles: 1) that conservation should be community-based; 2) that things conserved should be managed to achieve both development and conservation goals; 3) that markets should play a role in shaping the incentives for conservation. The editors and contributors of this volume examine the success or otherwise of these practices in a number of different contexts across the continent.
Uganda: Fountain Publishers; Kenya: EAEP; Zimbabwe: Weaver Press
Table of Contents
- Part 1 Setting the scene: conservation and communities, William Adams and D. Hulme
- community conservation from concept to practice - a practical framework, Edmund Barrow and Marshall Murphree. Part 2 Conservation policies and institutions: the evolution of policy in Namibia and Zimbabwe, Brian Jones and M. Murphree
- community conservation in East Africa, Edmund Barrow et al
- the political economy of community conservation policy in Mozambique, Simon Anstey
- reforming a conservation bureaucracy in Tanzania, Patrick Bergin. Part 3 Parks and people revisited -community conservation as projected area outreach: Lake Mburo National Park, Uganda, D. Hulme and Mark Infield
- Mgahinga Gorilla National Park, Uganda, William Adams and Mark Infield
- Tarangire National Park, Tanzania (1992-97), Kadzo Kangwana and Rafael Ole Mako. Part 4 Developing management: the evolution of a community-based approach to wildlife management at Kunene, Namibia, Brian Jones
- community conservation and private business (Mahenye, Zimbabwe), M. Murphree
- community conservation designed by the community (Mozambique), Simon Anstey and Camila de Sousa. Part 5 Economics, incentives and institutional change: the nature of benefits and the benefits of nature, Lucy Emerton
- economic incentives and institutional change in Zimbabwe, Ivan Bond
- committees, rights, costs and benefits (Zimbabwe's CAMPFIRE programme), James Murombedzi. Part 6 Measuring and monitoring conservation: can community conservation strategies meet the conservation agenda?, Kadzo Kangwana
- participatory natural resource management - implications for conservation, Russell Taylor. Part 7 Conclusions: the future of community conservation
- community conservation and beyond.
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