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Book Summary of Economics for the Wilds by Timothy M. Swanson and Edward B. Barbier, eds.
Citation:
Economics for the Wilds, Timothy M. Swanson and Edward B. Barbier, (eds),(Washington DC: Island Press, 1992), 226 pp.
This Book Summary written by: T.A. O'Lonergan, Conflict Research Consortium
Economics for the Wilds attempts to reconcile economic development
with conservation of natural resources. That is, the editors assert
that if properly constructed, economics can account for the value, and assure
the conservation of, natural resources.
Economics for the Wilds will be of interest to those who seek an
economic approach to the conservation of wild, natural resources.
This work is a collection of work by multiple authors. The first essay
addresses some of the difficulties with past and present attempts to maintain
the diversity of wildlife and wild lands while continuing
economic development. The final part of this essay presents an overview of
economics for the wild, the underlying assertion of which is that economics and
conservation are inextricably intertwined. The second chapter addresses
the main theme of the book which is that the conservation of wildlife
and natural habitats has economic value. Toward this end, a brief
review of an argument in support of this assertion is presented. The economics
of sustainable management, comparative returns and discounting,
and economic decision-making about resource use are examined.
Bruce Aylward examines appropriating the value of wildlife
and wild lands. He asserts that, "Sustainable management will only
occur if the full range of benefits and costs of resource use feed into the decision-making
process of the de facto managers of wild resources." This full
range of benefits must include: direct uses, genetic resources,
ecosystem services and existence values. Swanson examines the
role of utilization in biodiversity conservation. He discusses
several approaches for conserving biodiversity, one of which is
regulation of trade in wildlife, such as The Convention on
International Trade in Endangered species (CITES).
Barbier addresses community based development in Africa in chapter
five. He discusses: The Communal Area Management Programme for Indigenous
Resources (CAMPFIRE) in Zimbabwe and the Luangwa
Integrated Resource Development Project in Zambia. The
next chapter focuses upon wildlife tourism with particular focus on
programs in Botswana, Kenya, Costa Rica and the Khao
Yai National Park in Thailand. Sustainable rain forest
utilization is the topic of chapter seven which examines the economic incentives
for deforestation.
Methods for maintaining wildlife and wild lands while at the same
time deriving the profits to be made from their utilization is addressed in
chapter eight. The authors examine a range of methods for wildlife
utilization which include captive breeding and wild harvests.
The last chapter save one addresses the illegal exploitation of wildlife
defined as either the irregular or immoral use of wildlife. They
discuss illegal exploitation as an economic activity with a special
focus on the structure of the poaching industry. In the final chapter
the editors propose that the prediction of an imminent end to wild lands can
only be averted, or at least slowed, by the recognition of the role that
economics plays in the conservation of wild places. Economics for
the Wilds offers support for the assertion that the conservation of
wildlife and wild lands has economic worth which must be accounted for
in decisions about the utilization of these species and habitats. The
justification of this assertion is contained solely in the economic values to
humans which conservation protects.
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