Capital and Control: Neocolonialism Through the Militarization of African Wildlife Conservation

E. Jones
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Abstract

Biodiversity loss is occurring at catastrophic rates worldwide. In sub-Saharan Africa, wildlife conservation efforts have centred around creating and managing protected areas. However, contemporary African states and their environmental policies are inseparable from the legacies of their former colonial powers, who sponsored the creation and continued management of protected areas to best serve their interests.  By reviewing existing literature and a case study on the colonial history of Virunga National Park in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, this paper examines how African wildlife has been accumulated as capital belonging to the nation-state, legitimizing the use of military force against perceived threats. Through this framing, former colonial powers have funded and sponsored militarized conservation in Africa, effectively retaining control over the narratives and management of the continent’s natural resources in the postcolonial period.
资本与控制:非洲野生动物保护军事化中的新殖民主义
生物多样性的丧失正在世界范围内以灾难性的速度发生。在撒哈拉以南非洲,野生动物保护工作的重点是建立和管理保护区。然而,当代非洲国家及其环境政策与它们的前殖民大国的遗产是分不开的,这些殖民大国赞助了保护区的创建和持续管理,以最好地服务于它们的利益。通过回顾现有文献和对刚果民主共和国维龙加国家公园殖民历史的案例研究,本文探讨了非洲野生动物是如何作为属于民族国家的资本积累起来的,并使使用军事力量对抗感知到的威胁合法化。通过这种框架,前殖民国家资助和赞助了非洲的军事化保护,有效地控制了后殖民时期非洲大陆自然资源的叙述和管理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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