部落领袖/传统领袖在管理加纳上东部地区古鲁恩语人民的土地利用和生物多样性方面的作用

R. Bardy, Helen Akolgo-Azupogo, A. Rubens
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引用次数: 0

摘要

管理一个地区的土地使用和生物多样性需要决策者和受规则和条例影响的人之间达成持久的协议。在非洲,这些协定取决于法律当局的代表和民间社会(部落制度中的传统领袖)的集体努力的效力。在本研究中,我们探讨了部落首领在保护生物多样性中的作用(这是获得法律法规的基础),部落社区的生物多样性价值,以及部落首领与法律当局之间的互动在成功实施生物多样性目标中的作用。成功的合作需要当地的管理制度与现有的现代或成文法相结合,以确保可持续的土地利用、自然资源的保护和促进生物多样性。为了研究这种关系,我们对加纳上东部地区讲古鲁恩语的主要利益相关者进行了深入访谈。我们发现,土著人民仍然保存和应用他们继承的保护自然的准则。这些调查结果突出了将土著部落当局纳入规划战略和制定政策和条例的重要性。这种合作最终在自然和社区的社会福祉之间创造了和谐的平衡。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Role of Tribal Leaders/Traditional Leaders in Regulating Land Use and Biodiversity Among the Gurune-Speaking People of the Upper East Region in Ghana
Regulating land use and the biodiversity of a region requires lasting accords between those who make the decisions and those who are affected by the rules and regulations. In Africa, these accords depend on the effectiveness of the collective efforts of the representatives of the legal authorities and the civil society (the traditional leaders in the tribal system). In this study, we investigated the role of tribal leaders in conserving biodiversity (which is a base for obtaining accords with statutory regulations), the value of biodiversity for the tribal communities, and the role of the interaction between tribal leaders and legal authorities in successfully implementing the objectives of biodiversity. Successful collaboration requires indigenous regulatory systems to be merged with existing modern or statutory laws to ensure sustainable land use, the conservation of natural resources, and the promotion of biodiversity. To examine this relationship, we conducted in-depth interviews with key stakeholders of the Gurune-speaking people in the Upper East Region of Ghana. We found that the indigenous people still preserve and apply the norms for conserving nature that they inherited. These findings highlighted the importance of including indigenous tribal authorities in planning strategies and developing policies and regulations. This collaboration ultimately creates a harmonious balance between nature and the social well-being of the community.
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