13 research outputs found
Biodiversity conservation: history, protected areas and hotspots
Angola is a large country of great physiographic, climatic and habitat
diversity, with a corresponding richness in animal and plant species. Legally protected
areas (National Parks and Game Reserves) were established from the 1930s
and occupied 6% of the country’s terrestrial area at the time of independence in
1975. As a consequence of an extended war, the Protected Areas were exposed to
serious neglect, poaching and land invasions. Many habitats of biogeographic
importance, and many rare and endemic species came under threat. The recently
strengthened administration gives cause for optimism that a new era for biodiversity
conservation is at hand. The Protected Areas system was greatly expanded in 2011,
and increasing resources are being made available towards achieving management
effectivenessinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
'Securing Space': Mapping and fencing in transfrontier conservation in Southern Africa
This article provides a brief history of the use of maps and fences in wildlife conservation. Analysis of the promotional materials of one of the main promoters of Transfrontier Conservation Areas (TFCAs) in southern Africa, the Peace Parks Foundation, reveals the importance of mapping as a planning and promotion tool. These maps, however, appear to be quite silent about the communities that are supposed to benefit from the TFCAs. The fences around wildlife areas are resented by local communities because they prevent them from harvesting natural resources "on the other side." Local communities also object to the fences because of their symbolic meaning and instrumentality, shown in warfare and policies "to control and divide." Conservation organizations nowadays use the symbol of the fence to communicate their change in policy toward local communities: stressing the need to move "beyond the fences" by involving local communities in the management of protected areas and using these to promote economic development. ©2006 Sage Publications
Peace Parks: The Paradox of Globalisation.
Examines plans for transfrontier conservation areas or Peace Parks in Southern Africa and Central America. Environmental philosophy that underpins the notion of transfrontier conservation areas; Benefits of Peace Parks; Resistances to transboundary state making
Negotiating identity and heritage through authorised vernacular history, Limpopo National Park
Accumulation by Conservation
Following the financial crisis and its aftermath, it is clear that the inherent contradictions of capitalist accumulation have become even more intense and plunged the global economy into unprecedented turmoil and urgency. Governments, business leaders and other elite agents are frantically searching for a new, more stable mode of accumulation. Arguably the most promising is what we call 'Accumulation by Conservation' (AbC): a mode of accumulation that takes the negative environmental contradictions of contemporary capitalism as its departure for a newfound 'sustainable' model of accumulation for the future. Under slogans such as payments for environmental services, the Green Economy, and The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity, public, private and non-governmental sectors seek ways to turn the non-material use of nature into capital that can simultaneously 'save' the environment and establish long-term modes of capital accumulation. In the paper, we conceptualise and interrogate the grand claim of AbC and argue that it should be seen as a denial of the negative environmental impacts of 'business as usual' capitalism. We evaluate AbC's attempt to compel nature to pay for itself and conclude by speculating whether this dynamic signals the impending end of the current global cycle of accumulation altogether