拯救猎豹的事业:猎豹生态和纳米比亚人类野生动物冲突(HWC)干预中工作的多样化政治

IF 3 2区 社会学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Environment and Planning. E, Nature and Space Pub Date : 2022-11-07 DOI:10.1177/25148486221135008
Suzanne Brandon
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文关注的是猎豹生态,人类野生动物冲突(HWC),定居者殖民主义和私人土地所有权在纳米比亚的交集。猎豹在纳米比亚的生态适应性表明,有必要更全面地了解非洲保护和保护非政府组织的排列情况。以纳米比亚为例,猎豹对物种间威胁的生态适应使它们的领地主要集中在私人商业农场,在那里它们造成了HWC。虽然猎豹在纳米比亚的商业农场和农业社区造成了巨大的HWC,但HWC本身并不是本研究中讨论的冲突。相反,HWC是本文将分析的两个私营行业——商业农业和猎豹保护之间冲突的催化剂。在纳米比亚进行了13个月的人种学实地考察后,本案例研究表明,在全球、国家和地方层面上,非政府组织的保护干预政策中存在着不同的政治因素。这一研究发现了一个理论和概念上的裂缝,导致了政治生态学领域的异常。本文将讨论HWC在拯救猎豹的业务中是一个组织结构。在纳米比亚研究的非政府组织是一个以服务为基础的行业。他们投资于有形和无形的保护服务,而不是基于市场的参与性方法、生态系统服务和/或经济发展。这说明了从以市场为基础的保护转向以服务为基础的方法,并呼吁扩大政治生态学的视角,以解释非政府组织在非洲实地保护商业实践的其他案例。
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The business of saving cheetahs: Cheetah ecology and the diverse politics at work in human wildlife conflict (HWC) interventions in Namibia
This paper is concerned with the intersection of cheetah ecology, human wildlife conflict (HWC), settler colonialism, and private land ownership in Namibia. Cheetahs’ ecological adaptation(s) in Namibia point to the need for a fuller picture of the permutations of conservation and conservation NGOs in Africa. In the case of Namibia, cheetahs’ ecological adaptations to interspecies threats have shaped their territory to be primarily on private commercial farms where they cause HWC. While cheetahs cause HWC on commercial farms and farming communities in Namibia writ large, HWC itself is not the conflict discussed in this research. Rather, HWC is the catalyst for what this paper will analyze to be a conflict between two private sector industries—commercial farming and cheetah conservation. After thirteen months of ethnographic fieldwork in Namibia, this case study suggested diverse politics are at work within the NGOs conservation intervention policies at global, national, and local scales. This research identified a theoretical and conceptual fissure which led to an anomaly in the field of political ecology. This paper will argue HWC is an organizing structure in the business of saving cheetahs. The NGOs studied in Namibia are a service-based industry. They invest in both tangible and intangible conservation services rather than market-based participatory approaches, ecosystem services, and/or economic development. This is illustrative of a shift from market-based conservation to a service-based approach and calls for widening the political ecology lens to account for other cases of NGOs’ on-the-ground conservation business practices in Africa.
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