The Ethnic Politics of Nature Protection: Ethnic Favoritism and Protected Areas in Africa
Abstract
Nature protected areas are hailed as an institutional solution to the global biodiversity crisis. However, conservation entails local economic costs for some communities and benefits for others. We propose that the
establishment of protected areas in Africa follows an ethno-political logic which implies that governments
distribute protected areas such that their ethnic constituencies are shielded from their costs but enjoy their
benefits. We test this argument using continent-wide data on ethnic groups’ power status and protected area
establishment since independence. Difference-in-differences models show that political inclusion decreases
nature protection in groups’ settlement areas. Yet, this effect is reversed for protected areas that plausibly
generate tourism income. We also find that ethno-political inclusion is linked to legal degradation of protected areas. Our findings on the ethno-political underpinnings of nature protection support long-voiced
concerns by activists that politically marginalized groups carry disproportional costs of nature conservation.
Link to web site
file:///C:/Users/xjoali/Downloads/2024_4_Dawson_Haass_Muller-Crepon_Sundstrom%20(1).pdf
Date
2024-07Author
Sundström, Aksel
Müller-Crepon, Carl
Haass, Felix
Dawson, Stephen
Publication type
article, other scientific
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2024:4
Language
eng