Lexington Books
Pages: 262
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-1-7936-5029-0 • Hardback • June 2022 • $116.00 • (£89.00)
978-1-7936-5031-3 • Paperback • February 2024 • $39.99 • (£30.00)
978-1-7936-5030-6 • eBook • June 2022 • $37.50 • (£30.00)
Carolyn K. Lesorogol is professor at the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis.
Chapter 1: From Livestock to Elephants: The Journey to CBCs
Chapter 2: How CBCs Work
Chapter 3: Does the Elephant Have Milk?
Chapter 4: Bead Work is Women’s Work: Gender and Conservation
Chapter 5: Working Together, or Not: Conflict and Cooperation in CBCs
In this detailed and readable ethnography, Lesorogol, an anthropologist specializing in social change, examines and evaluates the interaction of community-based wildlife conservancies (CBCs) with traditional and contemporary institutions governing land management in three communities in the pastoral Samburu region of northern Kenya. Lesorogol proposes a more general application of "institutional layering" as a viable framework for acknowledging the needs of multiple social structures within pastoral cultures engaged with land management and promoting effective planning among them for wildlife resources. A useful addition to the literatures of economic anthropology, the anthropology of development, and the evolving issues associated with the implementation of community-based wildlife conservation projects in Africa. Recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty.
— Choice Reviews
Carolyn K. Lesorogol convincingly argues that the hope of successful community-based conservation lies not just in encouraging greater disbursement of funding but also the nurturing of the value of wildlife protection and pride in a conservation enterprise that is felt as ‘owned’ by the communities. Her work reflects two elements of scholarship: a systematic study using explicit methods, and an ethnographic study resting on her own background knowledge and her ear-to-the-ground exploration of what is actually happening below the surface. The result is a rich and valuable contribution to the literature on an important and globally significant experiment in trying to reconcile environmental protection and community livelihoods through the creation of community-based wildlife conservancies.
— John Galaty, McGill University
Conservation and Community in Kenya: Milking the Elephant is an important work in the context of community-based conservation, which is becoming a progressively relevant land use option in East Africa.
— Nomadic Peoples