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Community based natural resource management systems : an evaluation of the campfire programme in Zimbabwe : with special reference to Omay, and Makande Communal Lands in Nyaminyami DistrictSibanda, Backson M C, 1950- January 1999 (has links)
Communal Areas Management for Indigenous Resources (CAMPFIRE) is an innovative community based natural resource management strategy which transfers management and conservation responsibility from the state to the local communities. This thesis critically examines CAMPFIRE's potential for introducing sustainable natural resource management through the detailed examination of CAMPFIRE's implementation in Nyaminyami District, which is located in the Zambezi Valley of Zimbabwe. Comparisons with other districts are made as appropriate. The theoretical framework of this research is based on an examination of common property theories, theories of bundles of rights, globalisation and the notion of global commons. It is also based on critically examining Zimbabwean, African and international literature dealing with the management of natural resources used in common. There are five specific contributions which the thesis makes. Firstly, common property management is redefined and the difference between resources used in common but which are not common property and common property resources is clarified. Secondly, the study shows that CAMPFIRE is not sustainable whilst it remains dependent on wildlife alone and on a single species - the elephant. Thirdly, the thesis has attempted to extricate the CAMPFIRE concept from the wildlife debate in which it has become entangled and, fourthly, it examines the issues of globalisation and the global commons to show how decisions made at the international level impact on resource utilisation and management at the local level. Finally, the study examines what residual Tonga indigenous knowledge still exists and which aspects can be incorporated into present management systems. Overall, the results of the research suggest that while CAMPFIRE is an innovative strategy for sustainable natural resource management it, has not achieved its major objective of becoming a grassroots rural development strategy. It has become a top down elitist programme which is NGO and donor driven and government constrained. Legislation and policy need formally to address this problem. Finally, the thesis recognises the potential of the CAMPFIRE concept, especially if the weaknesses ofthe programme are addressed.
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The cultural right to practice traditional medicinal knowledge in Zimbabwe /Frommer, Chloe Giselle January 2002 (has links)
Cultural resources like traditional medicinal knowledge need to be recognized in their role tied to important regional practices in Zimbabwe. This is especially as a nexus of legal definitions for biological, intellectual and cultural resources will inform a National Sui Generis Legislation for the protection of these resources. Even further, because foreign pharmaceutical companies seeking plant genetic resources, called 'green-gold', benefit from derivatives of traditional medicinal knowledge it is important to protect these practices as part of an entire social and symbolic system. This system can be conceived as traditional medicinal knowledge is accessed, kept, shared, used and valued as a spiritual gift that links individuals, families and community in relationships. Change to this arrangement occurs when the derivatives of it are appropriated for local non-customary use in Zimbabwe's street markets, in a trade union of traditional-healers, as well as for research and development schemes. Acknowledging the spectrum of divergent interests and practices surrounding traditional medicinal knowledge is a prerequisite to creating a system of protections for it as a cultural resource. A National Sui Generis Legislation framework that clearly supports and protects the cultural right of local individuals and communities will thereby need to identify the important customary and non-customary regional practices around traditional medicinal knowledge and create entitlements to them accordingly.
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The cultural right to practice traditional medicinal knowledge in Zimbabwe /Frommer, Chloe Giselle January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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Draft Environmental Profile of ZimbabweSpeece, Mark W., University of Arizona. Arid Lands Information Center. 06 1900 (has links)
Prepared by the Arid Lands Information Center, Office of Arid Lands Studies, University of Arizona ; Mark W. Speece, compiler.
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Rural livelihoods in south-eastern Zimbabwe : the impact of HIV/AIDS on the use and management of non-timber forestry products.Mutenje, Munyaradzi Junia. January 2010 (has links)
Non-timber forest products (NTFPs) constitute an important source of livelihood for most poor rural households and communities in Zimbabwe. NTFPs also serve as a vital livelihood safety net in times of hardship. An important feature of this dependence is that almost all NTFPs are deemed to have ‘public good’ characteristics, with no exclusive property rights. Consequently, extraction is often intense and exhaustive because of lack of alternative income sources, unreliable productivity and weak enforcement of institutional arrangements governing NTFPs use. In recent years, with HIV/AIDS rampant in Zimbabwe, there are indications of a rapid increase in the extraction of NTFPs, mostly from common property resources. Appropriate natural resources policies need to be based on comprehensive research, yet to date scant attention has been paid to understanding the role of NTFPs in mitigating the predicaments of HIV/AIDS-affected households in Zimbabwe. The main objective of this study was to determine the types of and need for natural resource management interventions to help ensure the sustainability of local responses to HIV/AIDS.
The research focused on five communities of Sengwe Communal in the Chiredzi district, Zimbabwe. Multistage cluster sampling was used to select ten villages and households for the survey. Two villages from each community, representing the most and the least affected by epidemic were selected for each community using stratified random sampling. A cluster analysis was used to improve understanding of the challenges of rural livelihoods and how households diversify their livelihood strategies to cope with the various constraints. Five dominant groups based on their livelihood diversification patterns were identified : (1) smallholders/unskilled workers; (2) subsistence smallholder/non-timber forestry products harvesters; (3) crop production and non-timber forestry products extraction integrators; (4) commercial smallholders with regular off-farm employment; and (5) specialised commercial livestock producers. Multinomial logit model results showed that the level of education of the household head, the value of physical assets, cattle numbers and income, remittances, NTFPs income
and economic shocks were the main determinants of these livelihood choices. Empirical evidence also revealed that households that were statistically significantly affected by HIV/AIDS economic shocks practised ‘distress-push’ diversification by extracting NTFPs. These results suggest that policy makers need to advise rural households on how to improve their risk management capacities and move from geographically untargeted investments in livelihood assets to a more integrated approach adapted to the asset base of individual households.
Using panel data from 200 households in 2008 and 2009, regression models revealed that NTFPs extraction is an important ex-post coping mechanism for many HIV/AIDS-afflicted households. The results also revealed that the main determinants of livelihood strategy choices were differences in asset endowment, especially education, land and livestock and the impact of the shock. Asset constraints compelled diversification into lower-return activities such as NTFPs extraction. Findings from a comparative analysis of HIV/AIDS-afflicted and non-afflicted households showed that HIV/AIDS-afflicted households were relatively young, with relatively few physical and livestock assets. A fixed-effect Tobit model indicated a positive significant relationship between HIV staging and quantity of NTFPs extracted. The relatively young, poorly educated households with low household coping capacity in terms of livestock value relied more on the natural insurance of forests in buffering HIV/AIDS economic shocks. These results have important policy implications for development planners, conservationists and non-governmental organisations working in the region. There is a need for programmes that reduce pressure on forest resources, and improved access to education and health care, thus helping the poor to cope with the HIV/AIDS economic crisis.
This study also examined the extent to which forest degradation is driven by existing common property management regimes, resource and user characteristics, ecological knowledge and marketing structure. A Principal Component Analysis indicated that the existence of agreed-upon rules governing usage (including costs of usage), enforcement of these rules, sanctions for rule violations that are
proportional to the severity of rule violation, social homogeneity, and strong beliefs in ancestral spirits were the most important attributes determining effectiveness of local institutions in the management of Common Pool Resources (CPRs). Empirical results from an ordinary least regression analysis showed that resource scarcity, market integration index, and infrastructural development lead to greater forest resource degradation, while livestock income, high ecological knowledge, older households, and effective local institutional management of the commons reduce forest resource degradation. The results suggest that there is a need for adaptive local management systems that enhance ecological knowledge of users and regulates market structure to favour long-term livelihood securities of these forest-fringe communities. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2010.
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The role of leadership in the structure and functioning of community based natural resource management organizations : a Zimbabwean case study.Dimbi, Lilian Rungano. January 1998 (has links)
The objective of the Community Based Natural Resource Management (CBNRM) initiative is to enhance biodi versity conservation through approaches which balance the needs of local communities reliant upon natural resources, with national and international needs in conservation. This is achieved by addressing the imbalances in the distribution of costs and benefits in natural resource man~gement (NRM). So those who live with natural resources should receive benefits for their effort in conservation. Once there is a benefit stream associated with a resource, communities can then be involved in NRM as a long term strategy. In this way sustainable use of resources is promoted. For successful CBNRM, there has to be a vehicle for eliciting community participation and involvement through planning and decision making. In a communal property management regime, there exist sanctions and rewards for conserving/managing the resource. For community management to be successful there has to be an authority which protects the local rights and ensures that duties are fulfilled . This authority has to be local and national. Within the national context, the authority defining rights and duties in NRM is determined by the institutional framework in which the CBNRM initiative operates. At the community level, community leadership institutions are the authority protecting the rights and enforcing duties. Local leadership gains legitimacy from the wider institutional structures and from the community. How community leadership functions determines largely the structure and functioning of the CBNRM initiative locally. The case study of Kanyurira Ward, a community involved in a CBNRM initiative, namely CAMPFIRE in Zimbabwe, attempts to find out the role of leadership within the evolving institutional structures in shaping the functioning and structuring of the initiative. Analysis of the historical progression of leadership within the community and the community perceptions on leadership selection, monitoring and evaluation, legitimacy and the distribution ofcosts and benefits between the community and the leadership were used to identify the salient factors for effective and efficient local leadership in CBNRM. 11 The study showed that local leadership effectiveness and community expectations of leaders influence performance based on understanding of the leadership role and objectives of the CBNRM initiative. The environments in which CBNRM programmes operate have forced the community to change its leadership selection and monitoring criteria over time. External agencies have their own role expectations for local leaders based on their organizational goals and objectives. These different leadership role expectations place undue pressure on leaders. Community perceptions on cost -benefit distribution within CBNRM programmes affect the sustainability of the programme as they can be an incentive or disincentives to follow NRM rules. Changes in the institutional structures within the communities due to government policies have resulted in overlaps and conflicts in roles of traditional and modem political leadership. Though traditional leadership does not have formal legitimation, it has community acceptance and has persisted over the years. Approaches within CBNRM, need to be evaluated within the community's and leaders world view so that they can address any imbalances and mismatches in role, status and benefit expectations before negating on the CBNRM objective of community participation with benefits for sustainable NRM and development. / Thesis (M.Env.Dev.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1998.
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Endogenous development of natural resource management in the communal areas of Southern Zimbabwe : a case study approachVan Halsema, Wybe 09 1900 (has links)
Despite decades of development efforts to combat desertification processes in southern
Zimbabwe, a development deadlock occurs. Using the local knowledge systems as a basis, and
making an effort to strategically facilitate the revival of their capacity for checks and balances as
a development approach, endogenous development could become more realistic.
The actor-oriented RAAKS.methodology offers relevant tools for a case study'in which an
insight into the processes of innovation is obtained in order to confirm this.
The Charurnbira case study shows that many local interfaces hinder development. Although the
facilitation of platform processes could enhance endogenous development, the external
environment provides a serious constraint. The method employed did ndt permit broad
conclusions, but a deeper examination of recent experiences suggested that by giving local
people a greater say in natural resource use, local knowledge could be utilized more effectively
and better use could be made of traditional management structures. / Development Administration / M.A. (Development Administration)
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Endogenous development of natural resource management in the communal areas of Southern Zimbabwe : a case study approachVan Halsema, Wybe 09 1900 (has links)
Despite decades of development efforts to combat desertification processes in southern
Zimbabwe, a development deadlock occurs. Using the local knowledge systems as a basis, and
making an effort to strategically facilitate the revival of their capacity for checks and balances as
a development approach, endogenous development could become more realistic.
The actor-oriented RAAKS.methodology offers relevant tools for a case study'in which an
insight into the processes of innovation is obtained in order to confirm this.
The Charurnbira case study shows that many local interfaces hinder development. Although the
facilitation of platform processes could enhance endogenous development, the external
environment provides a serious constraint. The method employed did ndt permit broad
conclusions, but a deeper examination of recent experiences suggested that by giving local
people a greater say in natural resource use, local knowledge could be utilized more effectively
and better use could be made of traditional management structures. / Development Administration / M.A. (Development Administration)
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An appraisal of the impact of the Fast Track Land Reform Programme on land use practices, livelihoods and the natural environment at three study areas in Kadoma District, ZimbabweChigumira, Easther January 2006 (has links)
This research appraises the impact of the Fast Track Land Reform Programme at three resettled communities in Kadoma District, Zimbabwe. In particular it assesses the livelihood practices of land recipients and their effects on the natural environment. Two of the communities, Lanteglos and CC Molina were resettled under the A1 villagised and self-contained settlement scheme and are found in the Natural Farming Region III. Pamene, the third community, was resettled under the A2 small-scale commercial settlement scheme and is found in the Natural Farming Region IIb. Multiple research methods including household surveys, interviews, observations, reviews of literature and map construction through the use of Geographic Information Systems, allowed for the collection of empirical, descriptive, and spatial data to provide for the appraisal. The land use practices included dry land crop production, livestock rearing, vegetable gardening and exploitation of the natural environment for a variety of purposes. Farming was mostly subsistence with the use of traditional equipment by all three communities. Tenure was perceived to be insecure by beneficiaries and although a variety of papers to show ownership were held, none provided for leasing or freehold tenure. Despite acquiring natural capital from the resettlement process, the findings of this research show low levels of financial, physical and social capital amongst beneficiaries. Moreover climatic variability, the declining macro-economic and unstable political environment and little support from government have adversely affected the livelihoods of beneficiaries. The implication of all this has been a reduction in livelihoods that are based solely on agricultural production, leading to off-farm practices primarily exploiting the natural environment. The long term effect would be increased degradation of the environment, leading to reduced arable and grazing land, and thereby hindering sustainable livelihoods from farming. Recommendations are proposed based on this research’s findings being typical in Zimbabwe. Central to this is the need for government to revise its present land policy and, provide for a comprehensive and holistic land policy that should be based on the vision of how agriculture should evolve in Zimbabwe
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Land degradation in Mhondoro (Zimbabwe) : an environmental assessment of communal land uses and resource management practiceTichagwa, Cornelius Gibson 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2002. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: When land loses its intrinsic qualities or suffers a decline in its capabilities it is said to be
degraded. Land degradation manifests itself in various forms such as deforestation, soil
erosion, land, air and water pollution. In the context of sustainable development land
degradation has become one of the world's major concerns. Now, more than ever before,
it has become urgent to carry out empirical studies on the nature and extent of land
degradation and to come up with appropriate responses to the problem.
In much of the developing world communal natural resource management practices are
common. It is often assumed that communal exploitation of common property resources
such as woodlands, pastures, water sources and wildlife inevitably leads to land
degradation. This is due to the belief that humankind would seek to derive maximum
benefit from common pool resources without incurring any costs towards the
conservation of those resources.
This study was an environmental assessment of the impacts of communal land-use
systems and common property resources management practices in the Mhondoro
communal lands of Zimbabwe. The area has been subject to human settlement for over a
century and is regarded as a typical representation of a well-established communal land
management system. Several methods were used to make the assessment. These included
the following: a questionnaire survey; interviews with key informants; soil and vegetation
traverses and field measurements; tree density counts in demarcated plots; calculation of
the population density and livestock density for the study area; completion of an
environmental evaluation matrix and a communal projects sustainability index checklist;
and analysis of geo-referenced time-lapse aerial photography covering a fifteen year
period (1982-1997).
It was established that serious land degradation had occurred in Chief Mashayamombe's
ward in Mhondoro. Degradation manifested itself in the form of soil erosion and stream
sedimentation, woodland depletion, pasture degradation and wildlife habitat destruction. Communal land-use and natural resource management practices are only partially to
blame for this state of affairs. The fragile nature of the sandy soils of the uplands, the
sadie soils of the vlei areas, combined with the fairly high rainfall amounts (annual
average 750mm) make the area prone to soil erosion. Rainfall intensity tends to be high
in the area and when the rain falls on the poorly vegetated, and highly erodible soils
erosion occurs. The land has become severely stressed due to over-utilisation; a
population density of 93 people per km2 and livestock density of 110 cattle per km2 were
recorded. The land available for communal settlement in the area has been limited in
extent. Due to the general poverty of the communal farmers the replacement of nutrients
into the cultivated soil has not kept pace with the deteriorating condition of the land.
Contrary to popular misconceptions, communal area residents have shown concern for
environmental conservation through fallowing their fields, gully reclamation efforts,
grazing schemes, woodland preservation and tree growing practices. Remedial and/or
mitigatory measures for the environmental recovery of the area could adopt some of these
well-established practices and incorporate them in a whole-catchment management
strategy.
Key words
Land degradation, environmental degradation, pollution, environmental assessment,
common property resources, communal land uses, sustainable resources management,
sustainability indicators, soil erodibility, soil erosivity / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Wanneer grond sy intrinsieke waarde verloor of 'n afname in sy vermoë toon, kan gesê
word dat die grond gedegradeer is. Gronddegradasie manifesteer in verskeie vorme, soos
ontbossing, gronderosie, grond, lug en water besoedeling. Gronddegradasie het binne die
konteks van volhoubare ontwikkeling wêreldwyd van besondere belang geword. Nou, meer
as ooit vantevore, is dit noodsaaklik om empiriese studies uit te voer aangaande die aard en
omvang van gronddegradasie, en om vorendag te kom met toepaslike reaksies tot die
probleem.
Gemeenskaps natuurlike hulpbron bestuur praktyke is algemeen in die ontwikkelende
wêreld. Daar word dikwels veronderstel dat uitbuiting van gemeenskaplike eiendoms
hulpbronne deur die gemeenskap, soos woude, weivelde, waterbronne en wild,
onvermeidelik lei na gronddegradasie. Hierdie aanname het ontwikkel as gevolg van die
oortuiging dat die mensdom daarna sal streef om maksimum voordeel te trek uit
gemeenskaplike hulpbronne, sonder om enige koste aan te gaan ten opsigte van die
bewaring daarvan.
Hierdie studie behels 'n omgewings evaluering van die impakte van gemeenskaps
grondgebruik sisteme en gemeenskaplike eiendoms hulpbron bestuur praktyke in die
Mhondoro gemeenskaplike grond van Zimbabwe. Die area word al vir meer as 'n eeu deur
mense bewoon, en word beskou as 'n tipiese voorbeeld van 'n gevestigde gemeenskaps
grondbestuur sisteem. Verskeie metodes is toegepas met die evaluering, en sluit in: 'n
vraelys opname; onderhoude met sleutel segspersone; grond en plantegroei opnames en
veldopnames; boom digtheidstelling in afgebakende persele; berekening van bevolkingsen
veedigtheid vir die studiegebied; opstelling van 'n omgewing evaluerings matriks en 'n
gemeenskap projek volhoubaarheids indeks kontroleerlys; en 'n analise van geo-referenced
time-lapse lugfoto's wat strek oor 'n tydperk van 15 jaar (1982-1997).
Daar is vasgestel dat ernstige gronddegradasie voorkom in Hoofman Mashayamombe se
wyk in Mhondoro. Degradasie word gemanifesteer in die vorm van gronderosie en stroom
sedimentasie, uitputting van woude, weiveld degradasie en die verwoesting van wild
habitatte. Gemeenskaps grondgebruik en natuurlike hulpbron bestuurspraktyke is net gedeeltelik verantwoordelik vir die stand van sake. Gronderosie vind plaas ook as gevolg
van die sensitiewe aard van die sanderige grond van die hoogland, die sodic grond van die
vlei areas, in kombinasie met redelike hoë reënval (gemiddeld 750mm per jaar). Reënval
intensiteit in die area is geneig om hoog te wees, en erosie vind plaas wanneer reën val op
die hoogs erodeerbare grond wat met yl plantegroei bedek is. Die grond verkeer onder
geweldige druk as gevolg van oorbenutting; 'n bevolkingsdigtheid van 93 mense per km2
en veedigtheid van 110beeste per km2 is aangeteken. Die grond beskikbaar vir vestiging
van gemeenskappe word in omvang beperk. Die vervanging van grondvoedingstowwe in
bewerkte grond hou nie tred met die agteruitgang in die kondisie van die grond nie, as
gevolg van die algemene armoede van die gemeenskapsboere.
Inwoners van die gemeenskapsarea , teenstrydig met algemene wanopvattings, toon
besorgdheid ten opsigte van omgewingsbewaring deur die grond braak te lê, donga
herwinnings pogings, wei velds planne, bewaring van woude en praktyke ten opsigte van
die groei van bome. Remediërende en/of versagtende maatstawwe vir die herstel van die
omgewing kan van hierdie gevestigde praktyke inkorporeer in 'n bestuursstrategie wat die
hele opvangsgebied insluit.
Sleutelwoorde
Gronddegradasi e, omgewingsde gradasi e, besoedeling, omgewingsassessering,
gemeenskaplike eiendoms hulpbronne, gemeenskaplike grondgebruik, volhoubare
hulpbron bestuur, volhoubaarheids aanwysers, grond erodeerbaarheid, grond verwering.
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