Expanding mandate and corporate social responsibility in the management of National Parks and protected areas in Nigeria

Park’s objectives in Nigeria have evolved and been added over time. Four main phases are evident: Establishment of reserves to protect game, fauna; preservation of spectacular landscapes including cultural and scientific sites for the benefit, enjoyment and education of the public (Roosevolt 1929);...

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Main Author: James Oshuo Ewak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Università degli Studi di Firenze 2011-11-01
Series:Journal of Agriculture and Environment for International Development
Online Access:http://www.iao.florence.it/ojs/index.php/JAEID/article/view/19
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spelling doaj-4d181869fe0f4adab99e8c1ec93d73f52021-06-02T08:10:19ZengUniversità degli Studi di FirenzeJournal of Agriculture and Environment for International Development2240-28022011-11-011041/2253810.12895/jaeid.20101/2.1924Expanding mandate and corporate social responsibility in the management of National Parks and protected areas in NigeriaJames Oshuo Ewak0Department of History international studies, Faculty of Arts, University of Calabar, CalabarPark’s objectives in Nigeria have evolved and been added over time. Four main phases are evident: Establishment of reserves to protect game, fauna; preservation of spectacular landscapes including cultural and scientific sites for the benefit, enjoyment and education of the public (Roosevolt 1929); Conservation of biological diversity from genes to ecosystem and evolutionary processes (Decree 11 (1985) and decree 35 (1991). The last and most recent phase places increasing emphasis on the challenges of land and resource alienation on indigenous populations that answers to protected areas. The first three phases have been largely achieved through establishment of fortress conservation called National parks, reserves and Protected areas. The State’s seeming failure to meet the challenges of the fourth and recent phase has exposed the poverty of fortress conservation and threatened the integrity of protected areas. This paper posits that to sustain conservation in Nigeria and beyond, the State should establish Conservation Agency that will collaborate with conservation partners, encourage community participation and seek partnership with other stakeholders to promote rural development and capacity building amongst indigenous populations within protected areas.http://www.iao.florence.it/ojs/index.php/JAEID/article/view/19
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James Oshuo Ewak
spellingShingle James Oshuo Ewak
Expanding mandate and corporate social responsibility in the management of National Parks and protected areas in Nigeria
Journal of Agriculture and Environment for International Development
author_facet James Oshuo Ewak
author_sort James Oshuo Ewak
title Expanding mandate and corporate social responsibility in the management of National Parks and protected areas in Nigeria
title_short Expanding mandate and corporate social responsibility in the management of National Parks and protected areas in Nigeria
title_full Expanding mandate and corporate social responsibility in the management of National Parks and protected areas in Nigeria
title_fullStr Expanding mandate and corporate social responsibility in the management of National Parks and protected areas in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Expanding mandate and corporate social responsibility in the management of National Parks and protected areas in Nigeria
title_sort expanding mandate and corporate social responsibility in the management of national parks and protected areas in nigeria
publisher Università degli Studi di Firenze
series Journal of Agriculture and Environment for International Development
issn 2240-2802
publishDate 2011-11-01
description Park’s objectives in Nigeria have evolved and been added over time. Four main phases are evident: Establishment of reserves to protect game, fauna; preservation of spectacular landscapes including cultural and scientific sites for the benefit, enjoyment and education of the public (Roosevolt 1929); Conservation of biological diversity from genes to ecosystem and evolutionary processes (Decree 11 (1985) and decree 35 (1991). The last and most recent phase places increasing emphasis on the challenges of land and resource alienation on indigenous populations that answers to protected areas. The first three phases have been largely achieved through establishment of fortress conservation called National parks, reserves and Protected areas. The State’s seeming failure to meet the challenges of the fourth and recent phase has exposed the poverty of fortress conservation and threatened the integrity of protected areas. This paper posits that to sustain conservation in Nigeria and beyond, the State should establish Conservation Agency that will collaborate with conservation partners, encourage community participation and seek partnership with other stakeholders to promote rural development and capacity building amongst indigenous populations within protected areas.
url http://www.iao.florence.it/ojs/index.php/JAEID/article/view/19
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