Re-making conservation? : international conservation tourism and private wildlife ranching in South Africa

This thesis is an 'alternative format thesis', and thus the body of this work takes the form of a number of research papers. Its fundamental achievement is to significantly develop our understanding of the characteristics, practices, role/ significance, challenges and regulation of two con...

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Main Author: Cousins, Jenny Abigail
Published: University of Manchester 2009
Subjects:
910
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.512206
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5122062015-10-03T03:19:15ZRe-making conservation? : international conservation tourism and private wildlife ranching in South AfricaCousins, Jenny Abigail2009This thesis is an 'alternative format thesis', and thus the body of this work takes the form of a number of research papers. Its fundamental achievement is to significantly develop our understanding of the characteristics, practices, role/ significance, challenges and regulation of two contemporary and innovate forms of ecotourism which have rapidly expanded in recent years. They are international conservation tourism and private wildlife ranching in South Africa. Although quite separate entities, these sectors have a great deal in common. Both commodify wildlife and wild places for sale. Both have become increasingly commercialised and profit driven enterprises. Both have rapidly evolved in a rather piecemeal or organic fashion ahead of government regulation, and both have the potential to contribute to biodiversity conservation, community development and public education. These two types of ecotourism are directly linked through the huge popularity of South Africa's private wildlife ranches as a destination for international conservation tourism holidays. The intense coupling of nature and society created by these two forms of tourism required an interdisciplinary approach and research methods combining both qualitative and quantitative techniques. This thesis takes a political ecology approach to show how historical factors, ways of viewing the environment and power relations are shaping this emerging form of conservation. The thesis concludes with an overview of the substantive findings and suggestions for future research.910University of Manchesterhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.512206Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 910
spellingShingle 910
Cousins, Jenny Abigail
Re-making conservation? : international conservation tourism and private wildlife ranching in South Africa
description This thesis is an 'alternative format thesis', and thus the body of this work takes the form of a number of research papers. Its fundamental achievement is to significantly develop our understanding of the characteristics, practices, role/ significance, challenges and regulation of two contemporary and innovate forms of ecotourism which have rapidly expanded in recent years. They are international conservation tourism and private wildlife ranching in South Africa. Although quite separate entities, these sectors have a great deal in common. Both commodify wildlife and wild places for sale. Both have become increasingly commercialised and profit driven enterprises. Both have rapidly evolved in a rather piecemeal or organic fashion ahead of government regulation, and both have the potential to contribute to biodiversity conservation, community development and public education. These two types of ecotourism are directly linked through the huge popularity of South Africa's private wildlife ranches as a destination for international conservation tourism holidays. The intense coupling of nature and society created by these two forms of tourism required an interdisciplinary approach and research methods combining both qualitative and quantitative techniques. This thesis takes a political ecology approach to show how historical factors, ways of viewing the environment and power relations are shaping this emerging form of conservation. The thesis concludes with an overview of the substantive findings and suggestions for future research.
author Cousins, Jenny Abigail
author_facet Cousins, Jenny Abigail
author_sort Cousins, Jenny Abigail
title Re-making conservation? : international conservation tourism and private wildlife ranching in South Africa
title_short Re-making conservation? : international conservation tourism and private wildlife ranching in South Africa
title_full Re-making conservation? : international conservation tourism and private wildlife ranching in South Africa
title_fullStr Re-making conservation? : international conservation tourism and private wildlife ranching in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Re-making conservation? : international conservation tourism and private wildlife ranching in South Africa
title_sort re-making conservation? : international conservation tourism and private wildlife ranching in south africa
publisher University of Manchester
publishDate 2009
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.512206
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