Journal of Social and Political
Sciences
ISSN 2615-3718 (Online)
ISSN 2621-5675 (Print)
Published: 25 February 2019
Coexisting with Wildlife: Its Effects on Pupils and Children in a Maasai Community, Tanzania
Sayuni B. Mariki, Mathew L. Sengelela
Sokoine University of Agriculture, Tanzania
Download Full-Text Pdf
10.31014/aior.1991.02.01.56
Abstract
It is well known that human-wildlife conflicts can be most challenging for local people living inside or nearby protected areas. While many studies focus on the impacts of human-wildlife conflicts on community bordering PAs, few studies, however, have focused on these impacts on children. We conducted interviews with 46 primary school pupils and children from a pastoral community, 5 teachers and 21 parents, three focus group discussions, and direct observation to investigate how living with wildlife impact pupils and children. The findings revealed that distance to school was directly related to more disturbances by wild animals. Both girls and boys were disturbed by wildlife, but boys were affected more because they exposed themselves to wildlife attacks due to their role of grazing livestock and guarding crops at night during farming seasons. Crop loss and livestock depredation impaired families' capability to provide food for the children. Hunger combined with long walking distances to school made pupils tired and hungry, leading to poor concentration and understanding thus poor performance academically. Generally, pupils' dislike dangerous wildlife due to costs they incur, however, their attitude differs with perceived benefits, i.e. those who have received benefits had a positive attitude than those who had not. In order to reduce disturbance to school children and pupils, this study recommends building boarding schools, improving school infrastructure, and constructing schools nearby areas highly settled by local people.
References
-
Anthony, B. (2007). The dual nature of parks: attitudes of neighbouring communities towards Kruger National Park, South Africa. Environmental Conservation 34:236–245. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0376892907004018
-
AWF (1996). Knowledge, attitudes, and practises concerning community conservation in the Group Ranches around Amboseli National Park. African Wildlife Foundation Discussion paper series CC-DP-11
-
Chardonnet, Ph. des Clers, B., Fischer, J., Gerhold, R., Jori, F. &Lamarque, F. (2002). The value of wildlife. Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics), 21(1), 15-51.
-
Cobb, E. (1977). The ecology of imagination in childhood. New York: Columbia University Press.
-
de Pinho, J.R., Grilo, C., Boone, R.B., Galvin, K.A. & Snodgrass, J.G. (2014). Influence of Aesthetic Appreciation of Wildlife Species on Attitudes towards their Conservation in Kenyan Agropastoralist Communities. PLoS One, 9(2), e88842. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088842
-
Desai, A. A., & Riddle, H. S. (2015). Human-Elephant Conflict. Asian Elephant Support: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
-
DeStefano, S. & Deblinger R.D. (2005). Wildlife as valuable natural resources vs. intolerable pests: a suburban wildlife management model/tool. Urban Ecosystems, 8, 179-190.
-
Dickman, A.J. (2010) Complexities of conflict: the importance of considering social factors for effectively resolving human-wildlife conflicts. Animal Conservation, 13, 458–466
-
Disinger, J.F. & Roth, C. E. (1992). Environmental Literacy (ERIC Digest EDO-SE-92-1). Columbus, OH: ERIC Clearinghouse for Science, Mathematics, and Environmental Education.
-
Dublin, H.T. & Hoare, R.E. (2004). Searching for solutions: the evolution of an integrated approach to understanding and mitigating human-elephant conflict in Africa. Human Dimensions of Wildlife, 9(4),271-278.
-
Du Toit, J.T. (2011). Coexisting with cattle. Science, 333 (6050), 1710–1711. http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1126/science.1212452
-
Geng, L., Xu, J., Zhou, W. & Zhou, K. (2015). “Connections with Nature and Environmental Behaviours.” Plos One, 10 (5). http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127247
-
Hazzah, L., Borgerhoff Mulder, M., & Frank, L. (2009). Lions and warriors: Social factors underlying declining African lion populations and the effect of incentive-based management in Kenya. Biological Conservation, 142, 2428–2437.
-
Hemson, G., Maclennan, S., Mills, G., Johnson, P. & Macdonald, D. (2009). Community, lions, livestock, and money: a spatial and social analysis of attitudes to wildlife and the conservation value of tourism in a human–carnivore conflict in Botswana. Biological Conservation, 142,2718–2725. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2009.06.024
-
Honey, M. (2008). Ecotourism and sustainable development: Who owns paradise? (2nd ed.). Washington, DC: Island Press.
-
Infield, M. & Namara, A. (2001). Community attitudes and behaviour towards conservation: an assessment of a community programme around Lake Mburo National Park, Uganda. Oryx, 35(1), 48-60.
-
Jackson, R. & Wangchuk, R. (2001) Linking snow leopard conservation and people-wildlife conflict resolution: grassroots measures to protect the endangered snow leopard from herder retribution. Endangered Species Update 18, 138−141
-
Junge, S.K., Manglallan, S. & Raskauskas, J. (2003). Building Life Skills through Afterschool Participation in Experiential and Cooperative Learning, Child Study Journal, 33(3), 165-174.
-
Kaswamila, A., Russell, S. & McGibbon, M. (2007). Impacts of Wildlife on Household Food Security and Income in North-eastern Tanzania. Human Dimensions of Wildlife, 12 (6),391-404.
-
Khumalo, K.E. & Yung, L.A. (2015). Women, Human-Wildlife Conflict, and CBNRM: Hidden Impacts and Vulnerabilities in Kwandu Conservancy, Namibia. Conservation and Society, 13(3), 232-243.
-
Kideghesho, J.R., Røskaft, E. &Kaltenborn, B.P. (2007). Factors influencing conservation attitudes of local people in Western Serengeti, Tanzania. Biodiversity Conservation, 16: 2213-2230.
-
Kikoti, A. (2009). Seasonal home range sizes, transboundary movements, and conservation of elephants in northern Tanzania. Ph.D. Thesis. University of Massachusetts, USA.
-
Kipuri, N. & Ridgewell, A. (2008). A double bind: the exclusion of pastoralist women in the east and horn of Africa. Report. UK: Minority Rights Group International.
-
Kissui, B.M. (2008). Livestock predation by lions, leopards, spotted hyenas, and their vulnerability to retaliatory killing in the Maasai steppe, Tanzania. Animal Conservation, 1-11
-
Knight, S. (2009). Forest Schools and Outdoor Learning in the Early Years. London: Sage.
-
Lagendijk, D.D.G. & Gusset, M., (2008). Human-carnivore coexistence on communal land bordering in Greater Kruger Area, South Africa. Environmental Management, 42, 971-976.
-
Linkie, M., Dinata, Y., Nofrianto, A. & Leader Williams, N. (2007). Patterns and perceptions of
-
wildlife crop raiding in and around KerinciSeblat National Park, Sumatra. Animal Conservation, 10:127-135.
-
Madden, F. M. (2008). The growing conflict between humans and wildlife: law and policy as contributing and mitigating factors. Journal of International Wildlife Law & Policy 11,189–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13880290802470281
-
Madden, F. (2004). Creating coexistence between humans and wildlife: global perspectives on local efforts to address human-wildlife conflict. Human Dimensions of Wildlife 9(4),247-258.
-
Madulu, N.F., Yanda, P.Z., Maganga, F.P., Mung’ong’o, C. & Mwakaje, A. (2007). Assessment and evaluation of the Wildlife Management Areas in Tanzania. Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism, Tanzania.
-
Manfredo, M.J., Teel, T.L.& Henry, K.L. (2009). Linking society and environment: a multi-level model of shifting wildlife value orientations in the western United States. Social Science Quarterly, 90, 407-427
-
Mariki, S.B. (2016). Social Impacts of Protected Areas on Gender in West Kilimanjaro, Tanzania. Open Journal of Social Sciences, 4, 220-235. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/jss.2016.43028
-
Mariki S.B., Svarstad, H., Benjaminsen, T.A. (2015). Elephants over the Cliff: Explaining Wildlife Killings in Tanzania. Land Use Policy 44,19–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.landusepol.2014.10.018
-
Nelson, F. (2012). Natural conservationists? Evaluating the impact of pastoralist land use practices on Tanzania's wildlife economy. Pastoralism: Research, Policy and Practice, 2,15
-
Nelson, F. (2007). Emergent or Illusory? Community Wildlife Management in Tanzania. International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), London, 31 p.
-
Ngoitiko, M. (2008). The Pastoral Women’s Council: Empowerment for Tanzania’s Maasai. IIED Gatekeeper 137e, International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), London.
-
Ogada, O. O., Woodroffe, R., Oguge, N. O. & Frank, L. G. (2003). Limiting depredation by African carnivores: the role of livestock husbandry. Conservation Biology, 17(6), 1521-1530.
-
Ogra, M.V. (2008) Human-wildlife conflict and gender in protected area borderlands: a case study of costs, perceptions, and vulnerabilities from Uttarakhand (Uttaranchal), India. Geoforum, 39, 1408–1422.
-
Rao, K.S., Maikhuri, R.K., Nautiyal, S. and Saxena, K.G. (2002).Crop damage and livestock depredation by wildlife: a case study from Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve, India. Journal of Environmental Management, 66(3), 317-327
-
Richardson, M. (2015). The Impact of Children’s Connection to Nature. A Report for the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB). https://www.rspb.org.uk/Images/impact_of_children%E2%80%99s_connection_to_nature_tcm9-414472.pdf.
-
Stander, P.E. (1997). The Ecology of Lions and Conflict with People in North-Eastern Namibia. Proceedings of a symposium on lions and leopards as game ranch animals. pp. 10–17. Onderstepoort, South Africa.
-
Thirgood, S., Woodroffe, R. & Rabinowitz, A. (2005). The impact of human-wildlife conflict on human lives and livelihoods. In R. Woodroffe, S. Thirgood & A. Rabinowitz (Eds.), People and wildlife: conflict or coexistence? (pp 86–106). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
-
Trench, P.C., Kiruswa, S., Nelson F. & Homewood, K. (2009). Still people of cattle? livelihoods, diversification and community conservation in Longido district. In K. Homewood, P. Kristjanson& P.C. Trench (Eds.), Staying Maasai? livelihoods, conservation, and development in East African rangelands (pp.217-256). New York: Springer.
-
URT (United Republic of Tanzania) (1998). The Wildlife Policy of Tanzania. Revised March 2007. Dodoma: Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism.
-
Vuri, D. (2007). The effect of availability and distance from school on children’s time allocation in Ghana and Guatemala. Working paper. Rome: University of Rome "Tor Vergata."
-
Warren, Y., Buba, B. & Ross, C. (2007). Patterns of crop-raiding by wild and domestic animals near Gashaka Gumti National Park, Nigeria. International Journal of Pest Management, 53(3),207-216.
-
White, R. (2004). Young Children's Relationship with Nature: Its importance to children's development and the earth's future. White Hutchinson Leisure & Learning Group, https://www.whitehutchinson.com/children/articles/childrennature.shtml
-
Wilson, E.O. (1992). The diversity of life. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
-
Woodroffe, R., Thirgood, S. & Rabinowitz, A. (eds.) (2005). People and Wildlife, Conflict or Coexistence? Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press
-
World Wide Fund for Nature Southern Africa Regional Programme Office (WWF-SARPO)(2005). Human wildlife conflict manual. Harare, Zimbabwe, WWF-SARPO.
-
Zedrosser, A., Dahle, B., Swenson, J.E. & Gerstl, N. (2001). Status and management of the brown bear in Europe. Ursus, 12, 9-20