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Lessons learned and success of initiatives to rehabilitate degraded forests in Guangdong Province,China
Authors:Wayne Twine  Victor Saphugu  Dineo Moshe
Affiliation:1. Centre for African Ecology, School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences , University of the Witwatersrand , Johannesburg, South Africa;2. Department of Biology , University of Venda , Thohoyandou, South Africa;3. Environmentek, CSIR , Pretoria, South Africa
Abstract:The harvesting of communal natural resources by ‘outsiders’ (i.e. harvesters from other villages or towns) was investigated in ten rural villages in South Africa. Participatory Rural Appraisal (PRA) techniques were used to collect data in focus groups in each village. A case study quantifying the outflow of fuelwood was also conducted in one of the villages. Harvesting by outsiders was reportedly widespread and, in the case of fuelwood, a cause for concern. Of 13 recorded resources, the three most commonly harvested by outsiders were fuelwood, plants for traditional medicine and river sand for brick-making. An increase in harvesting by outsiders over the last decade was widely reported. This was related to socio-economic changes, largely associated with the first democratic elections in 1994. Key socio-economic drivers of this increased harvesting were: 1) the breakdown of institutional control of resources, 2) rising unemployment, and 3) a pervasive sense of entitlement associated with new-found political freedom and democracy. Evidence suggests that the increased harvesting by outsiders is a reality, rather than a xenophobic accusation, and that it poses a threat to the sustainability of communal resources in rural areas. This is discussed within the context of South Africa as a society in transition.
Keywords:Harvesting  communal  natural resources  rural-urban linkages  outsiders
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