Authors
Joseph E Mbaiwa, Amanda Stronza, URS Kreuter
Publication date
2011/2/18
Journal
Society and Natural Resources
Volume
24
Issue
4
Pages
400-411
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Description
This article summarizes 10 years of ethnographic research in the Okavango Delta and describes how local communities are collaborating with government, tour operators, and conservationists to manage wildlife through the Community-Based Natural Resource Management (CBNRM) program. CBNRM channels social and economic benefits to communities in exchange for their participation in wildlife conservation. Benefits include secured access to land, institutional support, employment, and share of profits from wildlife tourism. By some accounts, CBNRM has effectively achieved co-management and wildlife conservation; by others, the program has achieved only rhetorical success. We highlight collaboration between social actors at various levels—community, government, tourism industry, international nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)—as one indicator of success. We then consider the steps that need …
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