Variability and Change in Maasai Views of Wildlife and the Implications for Conservation

被引:0
|
作者
David Western
D. L. Manzolillo Nightingale
Victor Nyaliki Mose
Johnson Ole Sipitiek
Kennedy S. Kimiti
机构
[1] African Conservation Centre,
[2] Environmental Management Advisors,undefined
来源
Human Ecology | 2019年 / 47卷
关键词
Maasai attitudes; Human-wildlife conflict; Variability; Pastoralism; Sedentary livelihoods; Economic transition; Kenya;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Surveys conducted across sections of the pastoral Maasai of Kenya show a wide variety of values for wildlife, ranging from utility and medicinal uses to environmental indicators, commerce, and tourism. Attitudes toward wildlife are highly variable, depending on perceived threats and uses. Large carnivores and herbivores pose the greatest threats to people, livestock, and crops, but also have many positive values. Attitudes vary with gender, age, education, and land holding, but most of all with the source of livelihood and location, which bears on relative abundance of useful and threatening species. Traditional pastoral practices and cultural views that accommodated coexistence between livestock and wildlife are dwindling and being replaced by new values and sensibilities as pastoral practices give way to new livelihoods, lifestyles, and aspirations. Human-wildlife conflict has grown with the transition from mobile pastoralism to sedentary livelihoods. Unless the new values offset the loss of traditional values, wildlife will continue to decline. New wildlife-based livelihoods show that continued coexistence is possible despite the changes underway.
引用
收藏
页码:205 / 216
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Variability and Change in Maasai Views of Wildlife and the Implications for Conservation
    Western, David
    Nightingale, D. L. Manzolillo
    Mose, Victor Nyaliki
    Sipitiek, Johnson Ole
    Kimiti, Kennedy S.
    HUMAN ECOLOGY, 2019, 47 (02) : 205 - 216
  • [2] The pastoral Maasai and wildlife conservation in Tanzania
    Gamassa, DGM
    NATURE CONSERVATION 4: THE ROLE OF NETWORKS, 1996, 4 : 107 - 111
  • [3] Narrating Nature: Wildlife Conservation and Maasai Ways of Knowing
    Schauer, Jeff
    AFRICAN STUDIES REVIEW, 2024,
  • [4] Narrating Nature: Wildlife Conservation and Maasai Ways of Knowing
    Bluwstein, Jevgeniy
    CONSERVATION & SOCIETY, 2021, 19 (02): : 130 - 132
  • [5] Land tenure policies, Maasai traditions, and wildlife conservation in Kenya
    Seno, SK
    Shaw, WW
    SOCIETY & NATURAL RESOURCES, 2002, 15 (01) : 79 - 88
  • [6] Narrating Nature. Wildlife Conservation and Maasai Ways of Knowing
    De Wolf, Jan
    SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY, 2024, 32 (01) : 96 - 97
  • [7] Wildlife Tourism and Climate Change: Perspectives on Maasai Mara National Reserve
    Kifworo, Catherine Muyama
    Dube, Kaitano
    CLIMATE, 2024, 12 (11)
  • [8] The implications of mainstream economics for wildlife conservation
    Hall, CAS
    Jones, PW
    Donovan, TM
    Gibbs, JP
    WILDLIFE SOCIETY BULLETIN, 2000, 28 (01): : 16 - 25
  • [9] Public views about editing genes in wildlife for conservation
    Kohl, P. A.
    Brossard, D.
    Scheufele, D. A.
    Xenos, M. A.
    CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 2019, 33 (06) : 1286 - 1295
  • [10] Why are wildlife on the Maasai doorsteps? Insights from the Maasai of Tanzania
    Melubo, Kokel
    ALTERNATIVE-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES, 2020, 16 (03) : 180 - 192