Contents
Community
Conservation, Inequality and Injustice: Myths of Power in Protected
Area Management
Dan Brockington
The
principle of local support states that protected areas cannot survive
without the support of their neighbours. It is the dominant motif
of much writing about community conservation and the integration
of conservation with development. However, we should be sceptical
of it for several reasons. First, it implies that the weak can defeat
the agendas of the strong. Second, the principle ignores the fact
that inequality and injustice tend to be perpetrated about the globe.
It is not existence of poverty or injustice that will cause problems
for conservation, but their distribution within society. Third,
a detailed case study from the Mkomazi Game Reserve in Tanzania
shows how conservation can flourish despite local opposition. Advocates
of community conservation need to pay more attention to fortress
conservationís strengths and especially its powerful myths
and representations. Understanding how inequality and conservation
are successfully perpetrated will make it easier to understand the
politics of more participatory community conservation projects.
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