Abundant herds: Accumulation, herd management, and land-use patterns in a conservation area

被引:0
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作者
Michael Bollig
Hauke-Peter Vehrs
机构
[1] University of Cologne,Institute for Social and Cultural Anthropology
[2] University of Cologne,Global South Studies Centre Cologne
来源
Pastoralism | / 10卷
关键词
Conservation; Cattle husbandry; Wealth accumulation; Human–wildlife conflict; Zambezi Region; Namibia;
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摘要
North-eastern Namibia’s Zambezi Region became part of the world’s largest transboundary conservation area in the early 2010s: the Kavango–Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area. While wildlife numbers and wildlife-based tourism are increasing rapidly in this conservation zone, cattle herds and livestock-based economies are expanding as well. More than conservation and wildlife-based tourism, cattle husbandry is a project of the local population and of the local elite in particular. Cattle are an expression of wealth and are regarded as a means of saving. At the same time, cattle can be used to plough fields, pull sledges, and produce milk and meat for home consumption and also for sale. Cattle also fulfil important social functions; they are necessary for bridewealth payments and are used in cattle loans with which wealthy herd owners furnish poorer relatives. Recent investments into self-financed boreholes have opened new rangelands for the wealthy, while the expansion of conservation areas in the region’s wetlands and the establishment of wildlife corridors have rendered other rangelands challenging due to prohibitions and increasing incidences of human–wildlife conflict. The needs and practices of expanding cattle husbandry often conflict with the demands and challenges of conservation and conservation-related tourism.
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