The debate about how to best protect the Congo Basin's rainforest increasingly finds experts and Indigenous leaders arguing that it's time for a change, one that brings local and Indigenous people into the conversation.
Fortress conservation, a model exported to Africa during the colonial era, typically expels local people from land they once relied on for food, fiber and medicine, but experts argue the concept that this model uses – that of a 'pristine wilderness' untouched by humans – is a flawed construct. Many protected areas in Africa still use this conservation model, though, to the detriment of local people, sometimes resulting in violence.
On this episode of Mongabay Explores the Congo Basin, we interview lawyer and Goldman Prize-winner Samuel Nguiffo, Mongabay features writer Ashoka Mukpo, and conservation and Indigenous relations expert Vedaste Cituli about the legacy of fortress conservation in the Congo Basin, how the militarization of rangers has exacerbated tension with local people, and potential pathways forward to return some conservation control to local and Indigenous populations.
Find the first three seasons of Mongabay Explores – where we explored Sumatra, New Guinea, and more – via the podcast provider of your choice, or locate all episodes of the Mongabay Explores podcast on our podcast homepage here.
Episode Artwork: The Indigenous Batwa were evicted from their forest home in Uganda in the early 1990s when Mgahinga Gorilla National Park was established, leaving them landless and poor in a society that saw them as a lower class. Image by USAID Biodiversity & Forestry via Flickr (Public Domain).
Sounds heard during the intro and outro: The call of a putty-nosed monkey (Cercopithecus nictitans). This soundscape was recorded in Ivindo National Park in Gabon by Zuzana Burivalova, Walter Mbamy, Tatiana Satchivi, and Serge Ekazama.
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Congo Basin, Bonus: Pollution & impunity in the DRC
Congo Basin, Part 6: How the Congo Rainforest is shaped by elephants
Congo Basin, Part 5: Where's the money for Congo Basin conservation?
Congo Basin, Part 4: A 'just energy transition' requires justice in the DRC
Congo Basin, Part 3: Big challenges and potential for ape conservation
Congo Basin, Part 1: Second-largest rainforest in the world at a turning point
Sumatra, Bonus: Can young Indonesians help their iconic elephants survive?
Sumatra, Bonus Ep: She's here! Rare Sumatran rhino calf born
New Guinea, Part 7: Galip nut drives community empowerment and forest conservation
New Guinea, Part 6: Who is destroying these rainforests? The Tanah Merah mystery.
New Guinea, Part 5: 'Ghosts of the rainforest'
New Guinea, Part 4: A long and winding road
New Guinea, Part 3: Defending paradise
New Guinea, Part 2: 'Carbon cowboys' and illegal logging
New Guinea, Part 1: Protecting unparalleled biodiversity
Sumatra, Part 10: Solutions and optimism that drive conservation
Sumatra, Part 9: Restoration for peat's sake
Sumatra, Part 8: Where are the rhinos?
Sumatra, Part 7: Omens and optimism for orangutans
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