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How are wildlife conservation and protected areas governed in sub-Saharan Africa? ... What have been the key
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Slide 1:Political Ecology and Methodology for Protected Areas Research in Eastern and Southern Africa Peter J. Rogers
Bates College
Environmental Studies Program
111 Bardwell St.
Lewiston, ME 04240
tel: (207) 786-8206
fax: (207) 786-8334
email: progers@bates.edu
Slide 3:Dedication Dedicated to Ernest Grueing (1887-1974) - Governor of Alaska, U. S. Senator, unrecognized originator of the concept of “political ecology” (see Gruening 1951), and one of two Senators to vote against the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution in 1964.
Slide 4:Goal of Paper Outline a methodology for research which synthesizes poststructural theorizing about political ecology and governmentality with positivist ideas about systematic, transparent social science research methods
Slide 5:Organization of Paper Background
Political Ecology and Governmentality
Wildlife Conservation and Protected Area Management in Sub-Saharan Africa
Research Questions
Slide 6:Organization of Paper Methodology
Comparative Case Study Approach
Protected Area Complexes and Units of Analyses
Operationalizing Political Ecology and Governmentality
The Role of Computer Databases and Qualitative Analysis
Slide 7:Organization of Paper Conclusion: Is “Antiessential Political Ecology” an Oxymoron?
Slide 8:Background Political Ecology
Nature as politically contested and shaped
Non-human nature shapes processes of economics and political contestation
How we “know” the environment is critical
Political contestation involves actors
Slide 9:Background Governmentality
Recognition of importance of historical processes, the role of “genealogy”
Historical process should focus on the identification of important, distinct “problematization” events
Most importantly, “priority give[n] to ‘how’ questions”
Slide 10:Background Wildlife Conservation and Protected Area Management in Sub-Saharan Africa
CITES controversies over ivory trade
Spatial extent of protected area
Economic importance of wildlife tourism
Slide 11:Background Research Questions
How are wildlife conservation and protected areas governed in sub-Saharan Africa?
What are the sources of wildlife conservation and protected area governance in contemporary sub-Saharan Africa?
Slide 12:Methodology Comparative Case Study Approach
Quasi-experiment
Between case comparison
Within-case comparison
Slide 13:Methodology Serengeti-Mara and GLTP Case Study Similarities
Size
Transboundary
Multiple Administrative Jurisdictions
International Importance
Predominantly Savanna Ecosystems
National Economic Assets
Recent Management Plan Exercises
Slide 17:Methodology Protected Area Complexes
National government protected areas
Sub-national government protected areas
Community wildlife management areas
Private protected areas
Slide 18:Methodology Units of Observation
Direct elements
Indirect elements
Slide 19:Methodology Operationalization
What are the “techniques” employed in the governance of wildlife conservation and protected areas? (examples: fire management, water provisions for wildlife, community access to resources and revenue, forms of tourism, role of hunting or culling)
Slide 20:Methodology Operationalization
How are protected areas and wildlife conservation made “visible” for the purposes of governance? (examples: maps, organizational plans, and statistics)
Who is responsible for such projects of surveillance? (examples: researchers, consultants, management authorities)
Slide 21:Methodology Operationalization
What “forms of knowledge and expertise”and “rationality” guide wildlife conservation and protected area governance? (examples: disciplinary, theoretical, technical, and education backgrounds of researchers and management authorities)
Slide 22:Methodology Operationalization
Who is involved in the governance of wildlife conservation and protected area management, how do they identify themselves, and how do others identify them? (examples: local communities, ethnic identities, international conservation organizations, animal rights advocates, traditional authorities, private business, and government officials)
Slide 23:Methodology Operationalization
What have been the key “problems” of wildlife conservation and protected area governance? (examples: periodization of history based on critical “problem events/episodes,” see partial example in the conclusion below)
Slide 24:Methodology Operationalization
Historically, how has wildlife conservation and protected areas been governed in sub-Saharan Africa? (recapitulation of above questions based on problemization periodization scheme)
Slide 25:Methodology Computer Databases and Qualitative Analysis
Management of very large data set
Collaborative and participatory research
Dissemination of research product
Slide 26:Methodology Prototype Database
South African Protected Areas along the Western and Southern Boundaries of Kruger National Park
Initial Governmentality Survey, June 2003
Slide 27:Conclusion Is “Antiessentialist Political Ecology” an Oxymoron?
Theoretical need to recognize the biophysical reality of nature
Practical demands of collaborative research
Slide 28:Governmentality Problemataization, Techniques, and Environmental Impacts