Safeguarding the commons: conflicts over natural resource use and poverty alleviation strategies in rural Tanzania

Type Working Paper
Title Safeguarding the commons: conflicts over natural resource use and poverty alleviation strategies in rural Tanzania
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2002
URL http://dlc.dlib.indiana.edu/dlc/bitstream/handle/10535/1907/madulun110402.pdf?sequence=1
Abstract
This paper discusses the impacts of conflicts emanating from competing natural resource use and
poverty eradication strategies around protected and mining areas in Tanzania. Case studies of various
protected areas are used to demonstrate the nature and extent of conflicts emerging from changing
demographic conditions, land use competition and globalisation pressures. Such conflicts often occur at the
expense of the commons. In many protected and mining areas, local communities’ efforts to minimize
poverty levels are frustrated by globalisation influences and state’s interests which favour large-scale
operators, mostly foreigners. There is an increasing fear of losing their land without equitable
compensation. As a result, small-scale farmers among the commons are forced into unsustainable decisions
of either selling mining plots to small-scale miners or do the mining themselves. Such pressures magnify
the extent of conflicts over resource use. Expansion of mining in farmlands, for example, increases
environmental destruction risks, especially in areas that are already vulnerable. The long-term implications
include accelerated food insecurity, generation of a landless class, increased poverty, and rapid
environmental degradation. Land use conflicts around protected areas are demonstrated through
encroachment of farming communities, bush fires, excessive tree felling, and poaching. Most of these
negative practices are a function of ignoring the commons’ interests and needs to most of the save the
interest of state and globalisation. Experiences from the game controlled areas around Serengeti National
Park demonstrate that local communities can effectively participate in protecting wildlife and forestry only
when they are given proper recognition and ensured of benefit sharing. Examples are given in this paper to
support the concept of “community conservation” and “partnership forest management” in natural resource
management. The main issue here is whether the conflicting interests between the state and the commons
on the one hand, and the state and globalisation pressures on the other, can be harmonized. This
necessitates serious involvement of the commons in decision-making processes especially on issues that
directly affects their welfare. The paper concludes by calling for a dialogue that could trigger the process of
strategy development to safeguard the interests of all stakeholders including the commons. In all respects,
the commons’ interests need to be put in the forefront in instituting conservation measures and large-scale
natural resource exploitation programmes. Local communities need to be considered as equal partners who
have a stake in the planning, management and benefit sharing.

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