Towards an explicit justice framing of the social impacts of conservation

This study includes a case study of the Bwindi Impenetrable National Park in Uganda

Abstract

This paper proposes that biodiversity conservation practice will benefit from assessment of environmental justice outcomes, especially in contexts of poverty and social marginalisation. Whilst there is an existing body of work that implicitly considers the justices and injustices arising from biodiversity conservation interventions, we suggest that a more explicit justice assessment might complement this work. We develop some general guidelines for such assessment, drawing on traditions of social and environmental justice, highlighting the importance of considering two types of justice outcome: distribution and recognition. We note the non-equivalence of these different justice values, implying that they cannot be traded-off against each other.

We try out these guidelines through a case study of the Bwindi Impenetrable National Park in Uganda. We find that the assessment helps us to identify intolerable social impacts of conservation, notably failures to adequately address the long-term impoverishment and domination of the indigenous Batwa people, and offers constructive insight for how conservation can better align with the need for environmental justice.

This research was supported by the Ecosystem Services for Poverty Alleviation (ESPA) programme

Citation

Martin, A., Akol, A., Gross-Camp, N., Towards an explicit justice framing of the social impacts of conservation, Conservation & Society, vol.13(2), pp.166-178, 2015

Towards an explicit justice framing of the social impacts of conservation

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2015