Wildlife-Community Conflicts in Conservation Areas in Kenya

Wildlife-Community Conflicts in Conservation Areas in Kenya

Author: 
Okech, Roselyne N.
Publisher: 
ACCORD
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
African Journal on Conflict Resolution
Source: 
African Journal on Conflict Resolution, Vol.10,no.2,2010,pp.65-80
Abstract: 

Kenya is rich in biological diversity to which wildlife resources contribute a significant proportion. Many of the regions with abundant and diverse wildlife communities remaining in East Africa are occupied by pastoralists. Recent studies show that the majority of the local people around protected areas have negative feelings about state policies and conservation programmes. The alienation of grazing land for the exclusive use of wildlife and tourists has a very direct impact upon the pastoralist communities, and prompts them to raise questions about African wildlife policy – as if it leads to a ‘people versus animals’ conflict. Nevertheless, large areas of pastoral rangelands have been expropriated for exclusive wildlife conservation use. This has commonly been justified by the argument that pastoralists overstock, overgraze and damage their range while wild animals are seen as existing in harmony with their surroundings. Wildlife-human conflicts, therefore, are a consequence of the problem of resource

Language: 
Country focus: 

CITATION: Okech, Roselyne N.. Wildlife-Community Conflicts in Conservation Areas in Kenya . : ACCORD , . African Journal on Conflict Resolution, Vol.10,no.2,2010,pp.65-80 - Available at: https://library.au.int/frwildlife-community-conflicts-conservation-areas-kenya-3