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Implementation of local agenda 21's education, awareness and training component: a case study of GaboroneMogotsi, Barulaganye Jones January 2006 (has links)
‘What is required is the ‘politics of the rhizome’ in which everyone, every community, every nation and every major region comes to terms with the uniqueness of their situation and acts accordingly – and realises that it is only by vast numbers of people, of groups and organizations acting in accordance with possibilities of their situations, that the environmental crisis will be solved.’ (Gare, 1995:161). The study investigates the implementation of Local Agenda 21’s education, awareness and training component by the Gaborone City Council Environmental Health Department (GCCEHD) to address environmental challenges facing the city of Gaborone, the capital city of Botswana. The research was conducted as a qualitative case study that made use of semi-structured interviews, focus group interviews and document analysis as instruments of data generation. Samples of respondents were selected from the Gaborone City Council (GCCEHD) employees in management positions, workers, and elected political councillors. The study is contextualised through establishing environmental issues in the Gaborone City Council, identifying strategies to address environmental issues and the review of the Waste Management Plan 2003-2009, which the department uses as a guiding document for waste management. The study establishes that the council employees are mostly concerned with issues of waste management and need commitment from all Local Government sectors of the work force. The study established the importance of education, awareness and training as a response to environmental issues facing Gaborone. The study also establishes the need for social education in terms of public education, awareness and training needed for the public to adequately respond to environmental challenges in their context. Models and relevant policy and guiding documents such as the Vision for Greater Gaborone, DPSEEA Model and Botswana Environmental Planning Principles were identified and recommended for the department to consider. The awareness and training activities should be developed and involve the community in environmental management. This should enable the council to create opportunities for income generation, at the same time changing community negative attitudes towards the environment and improving service delivery by the department.
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The impact of tourism on agriculture in the Okavango Delta, Botswana.January 2003 (has links)
In recent years the use of tourism as a development strategy by third world governments has increased, resulting in the intersection of international tourism and local agricultural strategies. The aim of this thesis is to critically assess the impact of tourism development on local agriculture in the Okavango Delta in Botswana. More specifically, the study appraises the current state of tourism and agriculture in the Okavango Delta, assesses the social, economic and environmental effects of tourism development on the Okavango Delta and its communities, examines local agricultural production and consumption patterns, assesses the patterns of supply and demand of food in the region, and evaluates the impact of tourism on local subsistence agriculture, while making use of both qualitative and quantitative data sources. The Okavango Delta region is faced with several socio-economic problems. These include high unemployment levels, unequal regional development, income inequalities and extreme levels of poverty. 'Rural-urban' migration by local subsistence farmers in search of formal employment opportunities has risen steadily since the early 1990s, resulting in unprecedented social changes to the inhabitants of the Delta, and the abandonment of traditional farming practices. This, together with the limited interaction between the local population and tourism industry, is increasingly leading to tension between local and foreign parties in the region. The large proportion of foreign owned tourist facilities and foreign investment results in major economic leakages, and the exclusion of Motswana from any form of meaningful participation in the tourism industry. The presence of foreign tourists in the Delta enforces the need for imports, increasingly damaging local agricultural production as both production and consumption becomes imported. If tourism is to be of any benefit to the local population in the Okavango Delta, there has to be local involvement and ownership. The fostering of linkages between tourism and other sectors, particularly agriculture, is imperative in attempting to bring about socio-economic growth in this region. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2003.
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Community-based natural resource management, livelihood diversification & poverty alleviation : a case study of NG 22/23 and associated communities, Okavango Delta, northern Botswana.January 2006 (has links)
This paper presents a case study from Ngamiland, northern Botswana where community~
based natural resource management (CBNRM), through a joint venture agreement (NA)
between a Community~based Organisation (CBO) and the private sector for nonconsumptive
tourism has been implemented with the objective of contributing to localised
poverty alleviation and livelihood diversification through employment and CBO fee
revenue. The economic contribution of these benefits is considered with respect to
commonly accepted norms and standards within the development ideology of sustainable
development and its global measurements; therefore, a brief background of the concepts
of poverty, livelihood and ecotourism is presented to provide context for the evaluation of
CBNRM as a preferred land~use in Botswana. An evaluation of the significance of wage
employment revenue and consequent remittances in the specific case study is intended to
contribute to existing studies which have primarily emphasised the contribution of CBO
fee revenue only to households. It is concluded that wage employment revenue makes a
significant contribution at a household level to localised poverty alleviation and
livelihood diversification compared to the insignificant contribution ofCBO fee revenue. / Thesis (M.Env.Dev.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2006.
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Developing integrated management of ephemeral river basins in Botswana : the case of Boteti river sub-basinMotsholapheko, Moseki Ronald 04 1900 (has links)
Botswana is a water scarce country. Rainfall is highly variable, leading to limited surface
and groundwater resources. Due to persistently dry conditions most rivers found in
Botswana are ephemeral. The Boteti River sub-Basin is one of the numerous ephemeral
river sub-Basins, in Botswana. Key environmental challenges, resulting from human
activities, in the sub-Basin are: increased pressure on local resources due to overstocking,
overgrazing and over-harvesting; reductions in wildlife numbers; denudation of
vegetation and the resultant exposure of the soil to wind erosion. As a major step, to pilot
implementation of river basin management in the ephemeral river basins in southern
Africa, the Boteti River sub-Basin is one of the key areas identified for study under the
Ephemeral River Basins in the Southern African Development Community SADC (ERBSADC)
Project. This study was initiated, as part of the ERB-SADC project and its aim is
to investigate the socio-economic status of the Boteti River sub-Basin and determine the
potential for developing integrated management of water and land resources in the sub-
Basin. Its key objectives are to identify and assess types and patterns of water use; to
identify and assess key livelihood activities; and to critically assess community
participation in water resources management in the sub-Basin. A questionnaire was
administered to 293 households, a focus group discussion was held with twelve
community representatives of six villages in the sub-Basin, six traditional leaders and
five local government officers were interviewed as key informants, and informal
discussions were held with three local farmers. Results from the study indicate low
livelihood levels based on livestock and arable agriculture, high dependence on natural
resources and low participation of communities in water management. The study
concludes that a livelihood approach to integrated water resources management can help
deal with environmental challenges and enhance community participation. / Environmental Sciences / Thesis (M.A. (Environmental Science))
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Developing integrated management of ephemeral river basins in Botswana : the case of Boteti river sub-basinMotsholapheko, Moseki Ronald 04 1900 (has links)
Botswana is a water scarce country. Rainfall is highly variable, leading to limited surface
and groundwater resources. Due to persistently dry conditions most rivers found in
Botswana are ephemeral. The Boteti River sub-Basin is one of the numerous ephemeral
river sub-Basins, in Botswana. Key environmental challenges, resulting from human
activities, in the sub-Basin are: increased pressure on local resources due to overstocking,
overgrazing and over-harvesting; reductions in wildlife numbers; denudation of
vegetation and the resultant exposure of the soil to wind erosion. As a major step, to pilot
implementation of river basin management in the ephemeral river basins in southern
Africa, the Boteti River sub-Basin is one of the key areas identified for study under the
Ephemeral River Basins in the Southern African Development Community SADC (ERBSADC)
Project. This study was initiated, as part of the ERB-SADC project and its aim is
to investigate the socio-economic status of the Boteti River sub-Basin and determine the
potential for developing integrated management of water and land resources in the sub-
Basin. Its key objectives are to identify and assess types and patterns of water use; to
identify and assess key livelihood activities; and to critically assess community
participation in water resources management in the sub-Basin. A questionnaire was
administered to 293 households, a focus group discussion was held with twelve
community representatives of six villages in the sub-Basin, six traditional leaders and
five local government officers were interviewed as key informants, and informal
discussions were held with three local farmers. Results from the study indicate low
livelihood levels based on livestock and arable agriculture, high dependence on natural
resources and low participation of communities in water management. The study
concludes that a livelihood approach to integrated water resources management can help
deal with environmental challenges and enhance community participation. / Environmental Sciences / Thesis (M.A. (Environmental Science))
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