Conservation Industrial Complex: Difference between revisions

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Is a park in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and is known as an 'emblematic Protected Area. "It's a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It's the the biggest rain forest reserve in Africa and one of the biggest in the world. It also has funding from the United States, from Germany, and from the European Commission, among many other donors. What we found with our local partners was pretty shocking. In just eleven communities out of six hundred bordering the park, there were several cases of extrajudicial killings and multiple rapes by so-called eco-guards. And out of 250 people that were interviewed, sixty-three reported cases of physical abuse and torture of the local population.<Ref>Decolonize Conservation: Global Voices for Indigenous Self-determination, Land, and a World in Common, Edited by Ashley Dawson, Fiore Longo, and Survival International; Page, 122.</Ref>
Is a park in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and is known as an 'emblematic Protected Area. "It's a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It's the the biggest rain forest reserve in Africa and one of the biggest in the world. It also has funding from the United States, from Germany, and from the European Commission, among many other donors. What we found with our local partners was pretty shocking. In just eleven communities out of six hundred bordering the park, there were several cases of extrajudicial killings and multiple rapes by so-called eco-guards. And out of 250 people that were interviewed, sixty-three reported cases of physical abuse and torture of the local population.<Ref>Decolonize Conservation: Global Voices for Indigenous Self-determination, Land, and a World in Common, Edited by Ashley Dawson, Fiore Longo, and Survival International; Page, 122.</Ref>


 
<Blockquote>It's important to note that all of these funding organizations have preexisting human rights policies and due diligence processes. Go on their websites and you'll see plenty of documentation about how they integrate human rights principles into their programs. I think what our research showed is that too often this doesn't actually manifest on the ground. And by and large what it brings into focus are severe problems with the current Protected Area funding model that we see in central Africa. There's a huge lack of transparency and accountability: it turns out that many of these human rights abuses were known about, particularly by the WWF, who co-manages the park. When these human rights abuses surfaced there was very little understanding of who was responsible for what and who communities could go to for redress. It very much laid bare the inadequacy of international funding institutions' safeguards, procedures, and standards. And ultimately what it shows is that, as we've heard pretty much throughout the sessions today, it's based on a very fundamentally flawed "wilderness" model of conservation<Ref>Decolonize Conservation: Global Voices for Indigenous Self-determination, Land, and a World in Common, Edited by Ashley Dawson, Fiore Longo, and Survival International; Page, 122.</Ref></Blockquote>
 


= Sources =
= Sources =

Revision as of 20:56, 21 April 2023


Fortress Conservation

Fortress conservation is destroying the land and lives of Indigenous Peoples. But this model is embraced by Western conservation NGOs, and this is where most of the Western funding for nature protection is going. Why? Because the myths that sustain this model of conservation are reproduced in school texts, media, wildlife documentaries, NGO adverts, etc. The images we have seen since childhood about "nature," and the words we use to describe it, shape our way of thinking, our policies, and our actions. We tend to assume these words and images are the reality, as if they were neutral, objective, or "scientific." But they are not. Conservation is rooted in racism, colonialism, white supremacy, social injustice, land theft, extractivism, and violence. Contributors to this section show the role that the Global North plays in perpetuating these injustices by funding conservation that violates Indigenous Peoples rights. These projects lack transparency and accountability and don't tackle the real causes of the environmental crises.[1]

Salonga National Park

Is a park in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and is known as an 'emblematic Protected Area. "It's a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It's the the biggest rain forest reserve in Africa and one of the biggest in the world. It also has funding from the United States, from Germany, and from the European Commission, among many other donors. What we found with our local partners was pretty shocking. In just eleven communities out of six hundred bordering the park, there were several cases of extrajudicial killings and multiple rapes by so-called eco-guards. And out of 250 people that were interviewed, sixty-three reported cases of physical abuse and torture of the local population.[2]

It's important to note that all of these funding organizations have preexisting human rights policies and due diligence processes. Go on their websites and you'll see plenty of documentation about how they integrate human rights principles into their programs. I think what our research showed is that too often this doesn't actually manifest on the ground. And by and large what it brings into focus are severe problems with the current Protected Area funding model that we see in central Africa. There's a huge lack of transparency and accountability: it turns out that many of these human rights abuses were known about, particularly by the WWF, who co-manages the park. When these human rights abuses surfaced there was very little understanding of who was responsible for what and who communities could go to for redress. It very much laid bare the inadequacy of international funding institutions' safeguards, procedures, and standards. And ultimately what it shows is that, as we've heard pretty much throughout the sessions today, it's based on a very fundamentally flawed "wilderness" model of conservation[3]

Sources

  1. Decolonize Conservation: Global Voices for Indigenous Self-determination, Land, and a World in Common, Edited by Ashley Dawson, Fiore Longo, and Survival International; Page, 119.
  2. Decolonize Conservation: Global Voices for Indigenous Self-determination, Land, and a World in Common, Edited by Ashley Dawson, Fiore Longo, and Survival International; Page, 122.
  3. Decolonize Conservation: Global Voices for Indigenous Self-determination, Land, and a World in Common, Edited by Ashley Dawson, Fiore Longo, and Survival International; Page, 122.