
Designed for accumulation by dispossession: An analysis of Tanzania's Wildlife Management Areas through the case of Burunge
Author(s) -
Kicheleri Rose P.,
Mangewa Lazaro J.,
Nielsen Martin R.,
Kajembe George C.,
Treue Thorsten
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
conservation science and practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2578-4854
DOI - 10.1111/csp2.360
Subject(s) - livelihood , legitimacy , tanzania , transparency (behavior) , wildlife , wildlife management , government (linguistics) , revenue , business , public administration , common pool resource , commons , wildlife conservation , environmental planning , political science , economic growth , geography , economics , law , ecology , agriculture , finance , linguistics , philosophy , archaeology , politics , biology , microeconomics
Unfortunately, adverse rather than positive local welfare outcomes of community‐based conservation initiatives are quite common. Through the case of Burunge Wildlife Management Area (WMA) this study documents how WMAs in Tanzania appear designed to facilitate accumulation by dispossession in the name of decentralized wildlife management. Based on focus group discussions, interviews, and policy‐document analyses, we show that the process of establishing the WMA was fraught with hidden agendas and lacked legitimacy as well as transparency. Villagers and their local governments were also oblivious to the fact that the village land they contributed to forming the WMA would no longer be under village control even if they withdrew from the WMA. Decentralized revenue streams were gradually recentralized, and when the High Court ruled in favor of a Village Government that did not want to be part of the WMA, higher levels of government scared it to stay and to drop its legal as well as economic claims. We conclude that by mechanisms of rule‐through‐law WMAs deliberately dispossess village communities by attenuating the authority of democratically elected village governments. Hence, the wildlife policy needs urgent revision to democratize and thus promote positive livelihood outcomes of the WMA concept.