Conservation communautaire et changement de statuts du bonobo dans le Territoire de Bolobo

There is a diverse range of community-based conservation projects, from a top-down process with projects initiated by national and international institutions to a bottom-up process based on trial and error. In every conservation project, new actors appear, new messages are spread, and each person ta...

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Main Authors: Victor Narat, Flora Pennec, Sabrina Krief, Jean Christophe Bokika Ngawolo, Richard Dumez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire Éco-anthropologie et Ethnobiologie 2015-06-01
Series:Revue d'ethnoécologie
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/2206
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author Victor Narat
Flora Pennec
Sabrina Krief
Jean Christophe Bokika Ngawolo
Richard Dumez
author_facet Victor Narat
Flora Pennec
Sabrina Krief
Jean Christophe Bokika Ngawolo
Richard Dumez
author_sort Victor Narat
collection DOAJ
description There is a diverse range of community-based conservation projects, from a top-down process with projects initiated by national and international institutions to a bottom-up process based on trial and error. In every conservation project, new actors appear, new messages are spread, and each person takes these messages in their own way. As a part of an interdisciplinary study focused on the interactions between bonobos (Pan paniscus), habitats and humans in a community-based conservation area initiated and led by the Congolese NGO Mbou-Mon-tour in the Bolobo Territory (Democratic Republic of Congo), we analyzed the evolution of the local status of bonobos: bonobos as animals with relevance to legal regimes, economic activities, and ecological research and education. Locally, the MMT conservation project has sought to bolster a waning taboo on the eating of bonobos, complementing it with on bonobos and has strengthened it with national and international laws on bonobo protection. Bonobos are thus central to new rules and norms, including the creation of community defined protected forests. Secondly, whereas bonobos were previously widely seen as negative or unnecessary -because not eaten and associated to a bad omen- they are now considered as a driving force for local development. Finally, the interactions between the different actors (local people, conservationists, scientists…) imply a hybridization of traditional and scientific knowledge, contributing to the evolution of the knowledge of each actor. These preliminary results are probably a sign of deeper changes. Our implication in the conservation project and the development of a long-term study site focused on bonobos constitute challenges for the further analysis of the role played by the different actors. In the future, a study by a conservation anthropologist would allow to complete this first analysis and permit a better understanding of the places of conflicts and of collaborations as regards this conservation project.
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spelling doaj-art-2c88a5df4ae442bf917c90b0c21432812025-02-05T16:24:57ZengLaboratoire Éco-anthropologie et EthnobiologieRevue d'ethnoécologie2267-24192015-06-01710.4000/ethnoecologie.2206Conservation communautaire et changement de statuts du bonobo dans le Territoire de BoloboVictor NaratFlora PennecSabrina KriefJean Christophe Bokika NgawoloRichard DumezThere is a diverse range of community-based conservation projects, from a top-down process with projects initiated by national and international institutions to a bottom-up process based on trial and error. In every conservation project, new actors appear, new messages are spread, and each person takes these messages in their own way. As a part of an interdisciplinary study focused on the interactions between bonobos (Pan paniscus), habitats and humans in a community-based conservation area initiated and led by the Congolese NGO Mbou-Mon-tour in the Bolobo Territory (Democratic Republic of Congo), we analyzed the evolution of the local status of bonobos: bonobos as animals with relevance to legal regimes, economic activities, and ecological research and education. Locally, the MMT conservation project has sought to bolster a waning taboo on the eating of bonobos, complementing it with on bonobos and has strengthened it with national and international laws on bonobo protection. Bonobos are thus central to new rules and norms, including the creation of community defined protected forests. Secondly, whereas bonobos were previously widely seen as negative or unnecessary -because not eaten and associated to a bad omen- they are now considered as a driving force for local development. Finally, the interactions between the different actors (local people, conservationists, scientists…) imply a hybridization of traditional and scientific knowledge, contributing to the evolution of the knowledge of each actor. These preliminary results are probably a sign of deeper changes. Our implication in the conservation project and the development of a long-term study site focused on bonobos constitute challenges for the further analysis of the role played by the different actors. In the future, a study by a conservation anthropologist would allow to complete this first analysis and permit a better understanding of the places of conflicts and of collaborations as regards this conservation project.https://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/2206community-based conservationMbou-Mon-TourbonobosrepresentationDemocratic Republic of the Congo
spellingShingle Victor Narat
Flora Pennec
Sabrina Krief
Jean Christophe Bokika Ngawolo
Richard Dumez
Conservation communautaire et changement de statuts du bonobo dans le Territoire de Bolobo
Revue d'ethnoécologie
community-based conservation
Mbou-Mon-Tour
bonobos
representation
Democratic Republic of the Congo
title Conservation communautaire et changement de statuts du bonobo dans le Territoire de Bolobo
title_full Conservation communautaire et changement de statuts du bonobo dans le Territoire de Bolobo
title_fullStr Conservation communautaire et changement de statuts du bonobo dans le Territoire de Bolobo
title_full_unstemmed Conservation communautaire et changement de statuts du bonobo dans le Territoire de Bolobo
title_short Conservation communautaire et changement de statuts du bonobo dans le Territoire de Bolobo
title_sort conservation communautaire et changement de statuts du bonobo dans le territoire de bolobo
topic community-based conservation
Mbou-Mon-Tour
bonobos
representation
Democratic Republic of the Congo
url https://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/2206
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AT sabrinakrief conservationcommunautaireetchangementdestatutsdubonobodansleterritoiredebolobo
AT jeanchristophebokikangawolo conservationcommunautaireetchangementdestatutsdubonobodansleterritoiredebolobo
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