Forest Products, Livelihoods and Conservation

(Darren Dugan) #1
330 Sport hunting of elephant in Zimbabwe: a case study of Kanyurira Ward in Guruve district

of the CAMPFIRE programme to the subdistrict level should result in
communities receiving 80% of total earnings from wildlife management.
Despite this change, there is a need to recognise the limitations of what
programmes such as CAMPFIRE can deliver. Given the low labour and
technological intensity of managing wildlife, there is only limited scope for
increased production and employment opportunities based on utilising the
wildlife resource. Moreover, there is a strong demand for agricultural land in
the communal areas that enables households to earn and control incomes on
which their livelihoods depend. This demand for agricultural land has fostered
a persistent migration into the mid-Zambezi Valley. The subsequent loss of
wildlife habitat continues to cast a shadow over the future of sport hunting
and those who benefit from it.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We would like to thank Brian Belcher, Manuel Ruiz-Pérez and Bruce Campbell
for inviting us to participate in the Center for International Forestry Research’s
international comparison of cases of forest product development. We also
appreciated the support provided by Ousseynou Ndoye and Irdez Azhar. Valuable
comments on the earlier draft were received from Phosiso Sola, Russell Taylor,
Bruce Campbell and Lillian Dimbi-Goredema. We are also grateful to Bill Bedford
of Ingwe Safaris, Sally Bown of the Zimbabwe Association of Tour and Safari
Operators and members of Kanyurira Ward Wildlife Committee who provided
us with essential information

ENDNOTES



  1. Shanduko: Centre for Agrarian and Environmental Research,
    195 Fife Avenue, Harare, Zimbabwe. E-mail: [email protected]

  2. World Wide Fund for Nature (Southern Africa Region Programme Office),
    Almond Tree Cottage, Long Wittenham Road, North Moreton, Nr Didcot, Oxon
    OX11 9AZ, United Kingdom. E-mail: [email protected]


REFERENCES
Bond, I. 1994. The importance of sport-hunted African elephants to CAMPFIRE
in Zimbabwe. Traffic 14(3): 117-119.
Bond, I. 1996. Immigration and loss of wildland in CAMPFIRE districts: an
economic perspective. CAMPFIRE Newsletter 14: 7-8.
Bond, I. 1999. CAMPFIRE as a vehicle for sustainable rural development in the
semi-arid communal lands of Zimbabwe: incentives for institutional change.
Ph.D. Thesis, University of Zimbabwe. 289p.
Bond, I. 2001. CAMPFIRE and the incentives for institutional change. In: Hulme,
D. and Murphree, M. (eds.) African wildlife & livelihoods: the promise and
performance of community conservation, 227-243. James Curry, London.
Cutshall, C.R. 1989. Masoka/Kanyurira Ward: a socio-economic baseline survey
of community households. Center for Applied Social Sciences. University
of Zimbabwe, Harare. 37p.

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