Abstract

North-eastern Namibia’s Zambezi Region became part of the world’s largest transboundary conservation area in the early 2010s: the Kavango–Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area. While wildlife numbers and wildlife-based tourism are increasing rapidly in this conservation zone, cattle herds and livestock-based economies are expanding as well. More than conservation and wildlife-based tourism, cattle husbandry is a project of the local population and of the local elite in particular. Cattle are an expression of wealth and are regarded as a means of saving. At the same time, cattle can be used to plough fields, pull sledges, and produce milk and meat for home consumption and also for sale. Cattle also fulfil important social functions; they are necessary for bridewealth payments and are used in cattle loans with which wealthy herd owners furnish poorer relatives. Recent investments into self-financed boreholes have opened new rangelands for the wealthy, while the expansion of conservation areas in the region’s wetlands and the establishment of wildlife corridors have rendered other rangelands challenging due to prohibitions and increasing incidences of human–wildlife conflict. The needs and practices of expanding cattle husbandry often conflict with the demands and challenges of conservation and conservation-related tourism.This contribution describes the emergence and expansion of cattle husbandry in a region which had hardly any cattle before the 1960s and which has seen a major expansion of conservation areas and a subsequent refaunation since the 1980s. The contribution analyses current cattle ownership patterns and management practices. We argue that livestock husbandry and conservation have to be considered together and not as competing land-use strategies that need to be kept apart but as separate visions and aspirations of different stakeholders relating to the same landscape.

Highlights

  • Since 2011, the Kwando River wetlands and the adjoining tree savannahs in Namibia’s Zambezi Region have formed part of the huge Kavango Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area

  • Social scientists and historians have displayed the colonial roots of conservation; highlighted the relation between colonial violence and conservation (Lenggenhager 2018) (Bollig & Vehrs (n.d.): The making of a conservation landscape: The emergence of a conservationist environmental infrastructure along the Kwando River in Namibia’s Zambezi Region, Africa. forthcoming); analysed the effects of community-based conservation on social institutions (Silva and Mosimane 2014), and critiqued elite capture of gains from conservation (Lubilo 2018), the marginalization of e.g. forager communities (Taylor 2012), and the discursive formation of conservation (Moore 2010)

  • We looked for people who were themselves active in cattle husbandry and whom we thought knowledgeable about cattle ownership within the community

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Summary

Introduction

Since 2011, the Kwando River wetlands and the adjoining tree savannahs in Namibia’s Zambezi Region have formed part of the huge Kavango Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area. The establishment of two national parks (Nkasa Rupara and Mudumu) narrowed down spatial strategies of cattle owners as the wetlands of the region became less accessible, and where they were accessible, they became more dangerous due to increasing numbers of predators. The Kwando wetlands and adjoining savannahs, cattle numbers increased from a few hundred (at most) to several thousand.17 The section will detail how increasing wealth in cattle spreads in the population and to what extent livestock ownership is skewed.

Results
Conclusion

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