Evolving hunting practices in Gabon: lessons for community-based conservation interventions

Addressing today's environmental challenges is intimately linked to understanding and improving natural resource governance institutions. As a result conservation initiatives are increasingly realizing the importance of integrating local perspectives of land tenure arrangements, natural resourc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gretchen Walters, Judith Schleicher, Olivier Hymas, Lauren Coad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2015-12-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol20/iss4/art31/
id doaj-1deecc47076e4e95a53ebfd328059c15
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1deecc47076e4e95a53ebfd328059c152020-11-24T22:52:39ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872015-12-012043110.5751/ES-08047-2004318047Evolving hunting practices in Gabon: lessons for community-based conservation interventionsGretchen Walters0Judith Schleicher1Olivier Hymas2Lauren Coad3Human Ecology Research Group, Department of Anthropology, University College London, UKDepartment of Geography, University of Cambridge, Downing Place, Cambridge CB2 3EN, UKHuman Ecology Research Group, Department of Anthropology, University College London, UKEnvironmental Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment, Oxford University, UKAddressing today's environmental challenges is intimately linked to understanding and improving natural resource governance institutions. As a result conservation initiatives are increasingly realizing the importance of integrating local perspectives of land tenure arrangements, natural resource rights, and local beliefs into conservation approaches. However, current work has not sufficiently considered the dynamic nature of natural resource governance institutions over time and the potential implications for current conservation interventions. We therefore explored how and why hunting governance has changed since the precolonial period in two ethnic hunting communities in Gabon, Central Africa, integrating various ethnographic methods with resource-use mapping, and a historic literature review. In both communities, hunting governance has undergone significant changes since the precolonial period. A closed-access, lineage-based system of resource use with strict penalties for trespassing, has evolved into a more open-access system, in which the influence of customary governance systems, including magico-political aspects, has declined. These changes have occurred mainly in response to policies and governance structures put in place by the colonial government and postindependence, early state laws. This included a policy of merging villages, the introduction of more modern hunting techniques such as guns and wire cables, and a shift from community to government ownership of the land. Current governance structures are thus the product of a complex mixture of customary, colonial and state influences. These findings suggest that a historical perspective of resource governance, gained through in-depth and long-term engagement with local communities, can provide important insights for community-based conservation approaches, such as helping to identify potential causes and perceptions of environmental change and to design more suitable conservation initiatives with local people.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol20/iss4/art31/bushmeatGabonhistorical ecologyhuntingnatural resource governance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gretchen Walters
Judith Schleicher
Olivier Hymas
Lauren Coad
spellingShingle Gretchen Walters
Judith Schleicher
Olivier Hymas
Lauren Coad
Evolving hunting practices in Gabon: lessons for community-based conservation interventions
Ecology and Society
bushmeat
Gabon
historical ecology
hunting
natural resource governance
author_facet Gretchen Walters
Judith Schleicher
Olivier Hymas
Lauren Coad
author_sort Gretchen Walters
title Evolving hunting practices in Gabon: lessons for community-based conservation interventions
title_short Evolving hunting practices in Gabon: lessons for community-based conservation interventions
title_full Evolving hunting practices in Gabon: lessons for community-based conservation interventions
title_fullStr Evolving hunting practices in Gabon: lessons for community-based conservation interventions
title_full_unstemmed Evolving hunting practices in Gabon: lessons for community-based conservation interventions
title_sort evolving hunting practices in gabon: lessons for community-based conservation interventions
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Addressing today's environmental challenges is intimately linked to understanding and improving natural resource governance institutions. As a result conservation initiatives are increasingly realizing the importance of integrating local perspectives of land tenure arrangements, natural resource rights, and local beliefs into conservation approaches. However, current work has not sufficiently considered the dynamic nature of natural resource governance institutions over time and the potential implications for current conservation interventions. We therefore explored how and why hunting governance has changed since the precolonial period in two ethnic hunting communities in Gabon, Central Africa, integrating various ethnographic methods with resource-use mapping, and a historic literature review. In both communities, hunting governance has undergone significant changes since the precolonial period. A closed-access, lineage-based system of resource use with strict penalties for trespassing, has evolved into a more open-access system, in which the influence of customary governance systems, including magico-political aspects, has declined. These changes have occurred mainly in response to policies and governance structures put in place by the colonial government and postindependence, early state laws. This included a policy of merging villages, the introduction of more modern hunting techniques such as guns and wire cables, and a shift from community to government ownership of the land. Current governance structures are thus the product of a complex mixture of customary, colonial and state influences. These findings suggest that a historical perspective of resource governance, gained through in-depth and long-term engagement with local communities, can provide important insights for community-based conservation approaches, such as helping to identify potential causes and perceptions of environmental change and to design more suitable conservation initiatives with local people.
topic bushmeat
Gabon
historical ecology
hunting
natural resource governance
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol20/iss4/art31/
work_keys_str_mv AT gretchenwalters evolvinghuntingpracticesingabonlessonsforcommunitybasedconservationinterventions
AT judithschleicher evolvinghuntingpracticesingabonlessonsforcommunitybasedconservationinterventions
AT olivierhymas evolvinghuntingpracticesingabonlessonsforcommunitybasedconservationinterventions
AT laurencoad evolvinghuntingpracticesingabonlessonsforcommunitybasedconservationinterventions
_version_ 1716451907499720704