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Power dynamics and new directions in the recent evolution of <scp>CBNRM</scp> in Botswana

Lin Cassidy

2020Conservation Science and Practice24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Recently, the limited control of Botswana's community conservation organizations, or trusts, over resources has been further eroded. Community trusts now exist solely to disburse funds allocated by central government. The absence of any rights to control access to or use of their resources suggests the complete collapse of Botswana's original community‐based natural resources management (CBNRM) model. This collapse could facilitate fresh approaches that return to the original intentions currently lost behind the CBNRM acronym. Access and control can be more clearly framed through broader environmental stewardship frameworks that include moving below the homogenized community identity to specific resource user groups; broadening the conservation focus beyond monetized wildlife to include other resources and ecosystem processes; and establishing formal conservation agreements separately for specific resources, with the trust coordinating adherence to the rights and responsibilities held by individual users on the one hand, and government or public agencies on the other.

Topics & Concepts

Government (linguistics)Stewardship (theology)BusinessNatural resourceNatural resource managementWildlifeControl (management)Public relationsResource management (computing)Environmental resource managementPublic administrationPolitical scienceEconomicsManagementEcologyComputer sciencePhilosophyPoliticsLawBiologyComputer networkLinguisticsConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource ManagementRangeland Management and Livestock EcologyAquatic Ecosystems and Biodiversity
Power dynamics and new directions in the recent evolution of <scp>CBNRM</scp> in Botswana | Litcius