Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10311/483
Title: Contending with unequal and privileged access to natural resources and land in the Okavango Delta, Botswana
Authors: Mbaiwa, J. E.
Ngwenya, B.N.
Kgathi, D.L.
Keywords: Access to natural resources
Policies
Indigenous peoples
Subsistence livelihood
Wildlife
Botswana
Issue Date: 2008
Publisher: Blackwell http://www.wiley.com/10.1111/j.1467-9493.2008.00332.x
Citation: Mbaiwa,J.E. et al (2008) Contending with unequal and privileged access to natural resources and land in the Okavango Delta, Botswana, Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography, Vol. 29, pp. 155-172
Abstract: This paper reviews how state policy and regulatory instruments, including protected area alienations and concessions, have altered or denied the access to land and natural livelihood resources of the indigenous Basarwa and minority subsistence-oriented communities in the Okavango Delta (OD) in Botswana. Drawing on field research and guided by a sustainable rural livelihoods framework, the paper provides an overview of key institutional interventions – in particular the setting up of the Moremi Game Reserve, Wildlife Conservation Policy, Tourism Policy, Agricultural Development Policy and the erection of veterinary fences – that have served to privilege a foreign-owned and dominated commercialized wildlife and nature tourism sector and the export-oriented beef industry in the OD. The officially sanctioned barriers to customary and usufructory rights and access, and the non-recognition of historically embedded traditional land uses have decimated already marginalized resource-based subsistence livelihoods, and precipitated intergroup conflicts over preferential rights and access to resources and opportunities, notably wildlife, non-timber veld products, agriculture and community-based tourism schemes. Such outcomes, moreover, will have consequences for the longer-term sustainability of the OD both as a socioeconomic resource base and as a natural ecosystem.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10311/483
ISSN: 0129 7619
Appears in Collections:Research articles (Dept of Environmental Science)

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