Human–wildlife tourism conflict: towards an inclusive wildlife resources utilisation approach in southern Africa

The study examines wildlife tourism and local community livelihoods conflict in three southern African countries. The study incorporates the concept of community inclusiveness to reinvigorate wildlife utilisation research through qualitative interpretive methodologies. Despite the wildlife tourism s...

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Main Author: Zhou , Zibanai
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10708-022-10667-8
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/4991
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author Zhou , Zibanai
author_facet Zhou , Zibanai
author_sort Zhou , Zibanai
collection DSpace
description The study examines wildlife tourism and local community livelihoods conflict in three southern African countries. The study incorporates the concept of community inclusiveness to reinvigorate wildlife utilisation research through qualitative interpretive methodologies. Despite the wildlife tourism sector`s multi-billion dollar status, local communities living adjacent to wildlife sanctuaries still suffer deprivation and significant need. Findings further suggested that local communities have been pushed to the periphery of the wildlife tourism value chain; and attempts to meaningfully benefit from wildlife tourism have been curtailed by a combination of institutional barriers and inflexible Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species’ contemporary wildlife utilisation regime. Additionally, community voices on matters of wildlife tourism policy formulation and its inclusive use remain suppressed. It was concluded that contemporary wildlife tourism utilisation frameworks are not a shining example of community poverty alleviation strategies in the context of southern Africa; hence a root and branch shake up of the models is recommended.
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spelling ir-11408-49912022-07-21T09:11:35Z Human–wildlife tourism conflict: towards an inclusive wildlife resources utilisation approach in southern Africa Zhou , Zibanai Local communities Livelihoods Sustainability Human–wildlife conflict Southern Africa tourism The study examines wildlife tourism and local community livelihoods conflict in three southern African countries. The study incorporates the concept of community inclusiveness to reinvigorate wildlife utilisation research through qualitative interpretive methodologies. Despite the wildlife tourism sector`s multi-billion dollar status, local communities living adjacent to wildlife sanctuaries still suffer deprivation and significant need. Findings further suggested that local communities have been pushed to the periphery of the wildlife tourism value chain; and attempts to meaningfully benefit from wildlife tourism have been curtailed by a combination of institutional barriers and inflexible Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species’ contemporary wildlife utilisation regime. Additionally, community voices on matters of wildlife tourism policy formulation and its inclusive use remain suppressed. It was concluded that contemporary wildlife tourism utilisation frameworks are not a shining example of community poverty alleviation strategies in the context of southern Africa; hence a root and branch shake up of the models is recommended. 2022-07-21T09:11:35Z 2022-07-21T09:11:35Z 2022 Article Zhou, Z. Human–wildlife tourism conflict: towards an inclusive wildlife resources utilisation approach in southern Africa. GeoJournal (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10708-022-10667-8 0343-2521 1572-9893 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10708-022-10667-8 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/4991 en GeoJournal;2022 open Springer
spellingShingle Local communities
Livelihoods
Sustainability
Human–wildlife conflict
Southern Africa tourism
Zhou , Zibanai
Human–wildlife tourism conflict: towards an inclusive wildlife resources utilisation approach in southern Africa
title Human–wildlife tourism conflict: towards an inclusive wildlife resources utilisation approach in southern Africa
title_full Human–wildlife tourism conflict: towards an inclusive wildlife resources utilisation approach in southern Africa
title_fullStr Human–wildlife tourism conflict: towards an inclusive wildlife resources utilisation approach in southern Africa
title_full_unstemmed Human–wildlife tourism conflict: towards an inclusive wildlife resources utilisation approach in southern Africa
title_short Human–wildlife tourism conflict: towards an inclusive wildlife resources utilisation approach in southern Africa
title_sort human–wildlife tourism conflict: towards an inclusive wildlife resources utilisation approach in southern africa
topic Local communities
Livelihoods
Sustainability
Human–wildlife conflict
Southern Africa tourism
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s10708-022-10667-8
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/4991
work_keys_str_mv AT zhouzibanai humanwildlifetourismconflicttowardsaninclusivewildliferesourcesutilisationapproachinsouthernafrica