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Conservation and Community in Kenya

Milking the Elephant
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Community-based wildlife conservation is promoted as a win-win solution for wildlife and people that will protect biodiversity while improving the economic status of communities living among wildlife. This book, based on mixed-method anthropological research conducted in Samburu County, Kenya, demonstrates that, counter to simple narratives promising benefits, community-based wildlife conservancies (CBCs) are complex social institutions layered on pre-existing land use practices with differential impacts for members. Using ethnographic and mixed methods, the Carolyn K. Lesorogol explains how diverse social actors understand and operate CBCs, how benefits and costs are distributed, the gendered nature of CBCs, and how they impact cooperation and conflict in communities. Lesorogrol's analysis shows that economic benefits to members are generally very limited, and while some perceive improvements in security emanating from CBCs, there is also evidence that they heighten tensions over land use as well as human-wildlife conflict. This book offers critical insights into the implications of the CBC model for local pastoralist livelihoods, conservation, and social relations.
Carolyn K. Lesorogol is professor at the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis.
Chapter 1: From Livestock to Elephants: The Journey to CBCs Chapter 2: How CBCs Work Chapter 3: Does the Elephant Have Milk? Chapter 4: Bead Work is Women's Work: Gender and Conservation Chapter 5: Working Together, or Not: Conflict and Cooperation in CBCs
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