Litcius/Paper detail

Can the subaltern speak? Contradictions in trophy hunting and wildlife conservation trajectory in Botswana

Joseph E. Mbaiwa, Wame L. Hambira

2021Journal of Sustainable Tourism28 citationsDOI

Abstract

Botswana re-introduced trophy hunting in 2019. This generated a debate about the relevance of trophy hunting in achieving wildlife conservation and human well-being among wildlife stakeholders. The stakeholders include the Government of Botswana, local agro-pastoralists, photographic and trophy hunting tourism operators and anti-hunting groups. Stakeholders differ in opinion on the acceptability of trophy hunting as a socio-economic development and conservation tool. This paper, therefore, adopts the socio-ecological framework and uses Spivak’s rhetoric question: “Can the Subaltern Speak”, to analyse contradictions of trophy hunting, human well-being and wildlife conservation trajectory in Botswana. The study is qualitative and makes use of interviews and secondary data sources. The results indicate that the Government of Botswana and communities (agro-pastoralists) especially those residing in wildlife areas prefer both trophy hunting and photographic tourism as a strategy to derive tourism benefits and achieve wildlife conservation. Conversely, animal rights groups reject trophy hunting noting its failure to promote wildlife conservation. The paper concludes that the socio-ecological framework is the ideal guide for wildlife conservation and human well-being in wildlife areas. Both photographic tourism and trophy hunting are sustainable land use options with the potential to achieve wildlife conservation and human well-being in Botswana.

Topics & Concepts

TrophyWildlifeTourismWildlife conservationGovernment (linguistics)Wildlife tourismGeographyEnvironmental resource managementWildlife managementPastoralismEnvironmental planningFisheryEcologyLivestockForestryEconomicsArchaeologyLinguisticsPhilosophyBiologyRangeland Management and Livestock EcologyWildlife Ecology and ConservationConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management