Part 1: Overview
1. Conservation in Transition
Part 2: History of State-led Conservation
2. The Emergence of Parks and Conservation Narratives in Southern Africa
3. National Parks in South Africa
4. The Growth of Park Conservation in Botswana
5. The Emergence of Modern Conservation Practice in Zimbabwe
6. Protected Areas in Mozambique
Part 3: Conservation on Private Land
7. Private Conservation in southern Africa: Practice and emerging Principles
8. Game Ranching in Namibia
9. Game Ranching in Zimbabwe
10. Extensive Wildlife Production on Private Land in South Africa
11. Save Valley Conservancy: A Large-scale African Experiment in Cooperative Wildlife Management
Part 4: Community-based Natural Resource Management
12. Community Conservation in Southern Africa: Rights-based Natural Resource Management
13. The Performance of CAMPFIRE in Zimbabwe 1989-2006
14. CBNRM in Namibia: Growth, Trends, Lessons and Constraints
15. CBNRM in Botswana
16. CBNRM in Mozambique: The Challenges of Sustainability
Part 5: Integrating Wildlife and Parks into the Social Landscape
17. Recent Innovations in Conservation
18. Changing Institutions to Respond to Challenges: North West Parks, South Africa
19. Making Conservation Work: Innovative Approaches to Meeting Conservation and Socio-economic Objectives (an Example from the Addo Elephant National Park, South Africa
20. Table Mountain National Park
21. A Network of Marine Protected Areas in Mozambique
22. Towards Transformation: Contractual National Parks in South Africa
23. Transfrontier Conservation Initiatives in Southern Africa: Observations from the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Conservation Area
24. Making 'Conventional' Parks Relevant to All of Society: The Case of SANParks
25. Privately Managed Protected Areas
Part 6: Conclusions
26: ~Innovations in State, Private and Communal Conservation
Helen Suich is a development and resource economist, policy adviser, project manager. Brian Child is Associate Professor in the Geography Department at the University of Florida, USA and editor of Parks in Transition (2004). Anna Spenceley is editor of Responsible Tourism (2008).
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