Conservation from the inside‐out: Winning space and a place for wildlife in working landscapes
Abstract Protected areas fall far short of securing the space needed to sustain biodiversity and ecosystem function at a global scale and in the face of climate change. The prospects of conserving biodiversity in working landscapes help buffer the insularization effects of protected areas and hold g...
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doaj-39b4b7138f6742f88f7570974b8bbb702020-11-25T02:39:16ZengWileyPeople and Nature2575-83142020-06-012227929110.1002/pan3.10077Conservation from the inside‐out: Winning space and a place for wildlife in working landscapesDavid Western0Peter Tyrrell1Peadar Brehony2Samantha Russell3Guy Western4John Kamanga5African Conservation Centre Nairobi KenyaWildlife Conservation Research Unit Department of Zoology University of Oxford Oxford UKDepartment of Geography University of Cambridge Cambridge UKSouth Rift Association of Landowners Nairobi KenyaWildlife Conservation Research Unit Department of Zoology University of Oxford Oxford UKSouth Rift Association of Landowners Nairobi KenyaAbstract Protected areas fall far short of securing the space needed to sustain biodiversity and ecosystem function at a global scale and in the face of climate change. The prospects of conserving biodiversity in working landscapes help buffer the insularization effects of protected areas and hold great potential for biodiversity conservation on a landscape scale but depend on finding adequate space and a meaningful place in the lives of rural land users. Using a case study in southern Kenya, we show that the conservation of large open landscapes, biodiversity and the coexistence between wildlife and livestock can be achieved indirectly by reinforcing pastoral practices that depend on open space, mobility, social networks and institutional arrangements governing common‐pool resources. Pastoral practices and wildlife both depend on large multiscale interactions within interlinked social and ecological systems, which are threatened by land fragmentation, alienation and degradation. We show that large open spaces can be maintained by using a conservation approach starting from within community aspirations that emphasize the links between livelihoods, productivity, efficiency and resilience in pastoral economies and the secondary benefits of wildlife enterprises. Scaling up from an ecosystem to multi‐scale approach benefits pastoral communities by building resilience and new economic opportunities. In the process, the expanded scale conserves regional biodiversity and large free‐ranging herbivore and carnivore populations underpinning ecosystem function and the nationally important tourism industry centered on the Kenya–Tanzania boundary. The ‘inside‐out’ approach to the conservation of wildlife and biodiversity is place‐based, draws on local knowledge and informal governance arrangements and avoids the stigma of wildlife conservation driven by outside agencies. The human‐centered approach reinforces land health and spatial connectivity and encourages multi‐level and distributed governance arrangements embedded in large regional and national jurisdictions.https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10077coexistencecommunity‐based conservationconservation governancelandscape conservationnatural resource managementpastoralism |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
David Western Peter Tyrrell Peadar Brehony Samantha Russell Guy Western John Kamanga |
spellingShingle |
David Western Peter Tyrrell Peadar Brehony Samantha Russell Guy Western John Kamanga Conservation from the inside‐out: Winning space and a place for wildlife in working landscapes People and Nature coexistence community‐based conservation conservation governance landscape conservation natural resource management pastoralism |
author_facet |
David Western Peter Tyrrell Peadar Brehony Samantha Russell Guy Western John Kamanga |
author_sort |
David Western |
title |
Conservation from the inside‐out: Winning space and a place for wildlife in working landscapes |
title_short |
Conservation from the inside‐out: Winning space and a place for wildlife in working landscapes |
title_full |
Conservation from the inside‐out: Winning space and a place for wildlife in working landscapes |
title_fullStr |
Conservation from the inside‐out: Winning space and a place for wildlife in working landscapes |
title_full_unstemmed |
Conservation from the inside‐out: Winning space and a place for wildlife in working landscapes |
title_sort |
conservation from the inside‐out: winning space and a place for wildlife in working landscapes |
publisher |
Wiley |
series |
People and Nature |
issn |
2575-8314 |
publishDate |
2020-06-01 |
description |
Abstract Protected areas fall far short of securing the space needed to sustain biodiversity and ecosystem function at a global scale and in the face of climate change. The prospects of conserving biodiversity in working landscapes help buffer the insularization effects of protected areas and hold great potential for biodiversity conservation on a landscape scale but depend on finding adequate space and a meaningful place in the lives of rural land users. Using a case study in southern Kenya, we show that the conservation of large open landscapes, biodiversity and the coexistence between wildlife and livestock can be achieved indirectly by reinforcing pastoral practices that depend on open space, mobility, social networks and institutional arrangements governing common‐pool resources. Pastoral practices and wildlife both depend on large multiscale interactions within interlinked social and ecological systems, which are threatened by land fragmentation, alienation and degradation. We show that large open spaces can be maintained by using a conservation approach starting from within community aspirations that emphasize the links between livelihoods, productivity, efficiency and resilience in pastoral economies and the secondary benefits of wildlife enterprises. Scaling up from an ecosystem to multi‐scale approach benefits pastoral communities by building resilience and new economic opportunities. In the process, the expanded scale conserves regional biodiversity and large free‐ranging herbivore and carnivore populations underpinning ecosystem function and the nationally important tourism industry centered on the Kenya–Tanzania boundary. The ‘inside‐out’ approach to the conservation of wildlife and biodiversity is place‐based, draws on local knowledge and informal governance arrangements and avoids the stigma of wildlife conservation driven by outside agencies. The human‐centered approach reinforces land health and spatial connectivity and encourages multi‐level and distributed governance arrangements embedded in large regional and national jurisdictions. |
topic |
coexistence community‐based conservation conservation governance landscape conservation natural resource management pastoralism |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10077 |
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