Fjölrit RALA - 05.12.1999, Page 74

Fjölrit RALA - 05.12.1999, Page 74
72 Desertification in Botswana ment of the livestock sector and the utilization of the country’s grazing resources, a complex relationship between people and environment has developed, giving rise to dryland degradation or desertification. While considerable progress has been made in combating desertification, the results of most anti-desertification efforts have not yet achieved the expected results. The constraints against combating desertification in- clude climate, govemment policy and population growth. But, perhaps, the greatest constraint is the void and confusion created by the breakdown of traditional stmctures and the lack of adequate institutional capacity and mechanisms for implementing community based natural resource projects (Pilane 1997). Also, there are influential sceptics who currently believe that the nature and extent of desertification in the country have been exaggerated, a factor that could influence the pace of development, especially, of govemment’s action in fully implementing appropriate policies such as those outlined in the country’s blueprint, the National Conservation Strategy (NCS). However, given the strength of the economy, the political will, the democratic gov- emance and the environmental consciousness prevailing among the political leader- ship and educated elite at present, there appears to be good prospects for sustained ef- fort and possible success in containing the desertification problem in the country in the near future. References Abel, N.O.J. 1992. What’s in a Number? The Carrying Capacity Controversy and the Communal Rangelands of Southem Africa. Ph.D. thesis, School of Development Studies, University of East An- glia, 320 pp. Abel, N.O.J. and Blaikie, P. 1989. Land degradation, stocking rates and conservation policies in the communal rangelands of Botswana and Zimbabwe. Land Degradation and Rehabilitation 1, 101-123. Arntzen, J.W. 1989. Environmental Pressure and Adaptation in Rural Botswana. Free University, Amsterdam, 249 pp. Arntzen, J.W. 1990. Economic policies and rangeland degradation. Journal of International Develop- ment 2(4), 471-499. Arntzen, J., Chanda, R., Musisi, N., Ringrose, S., Sefe, F.T.K. and Vanderpost, C. 1994. Desertifica- tion and Possible Solutions in the Mid-Boteti River Area: A Case Study for the Inter-Governmental Convention to Combat Decertification (INCD). Consultancy Report, Department of Environmental Science, University of Botswana, 164 pp. Arntzen, J., Gould, J., Moletsi, M. and Ringrose, S. 1995. Botswana Environmental Profile. African Development Bank, 53 pp. Arntzen, J., Fidzani, H. and Tacheba, G. 1996. Communal Rangelands in Botswana: Less Subsis- tence, More Commerce and Fewer Beneficiaries. GCTE Subsistence Rangelands Workshop, Ga- borone, June, 17 pp. Chanda, R. 1996. Human perceptions of environmental degradation in a part of the Kalahari ecosys- tem. Geo-Journal 39, 656-671. Cooke, H.J. 1983. The struggle against environmental degradation - Botswana’s experience. Deserti- fication Bulletin 8, 9-15. Dahlberg, A. 1994. Contesting views and changing paradigms, the land degradation debate in South- ern Africa. Discussion Paper 6, Nordiska Afrikainstitutet, Uppsala, 59 pp. Dalal-Clayton, B. 1997. Southern Africa beyond the millennium: environment trends and scenarios to 2015. Environmental Planning Issues No. 13, IIED, London, 149 pp.
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