Local Voices, Local Choices

Local Voices, Local Choices

The Tacare Approach to Community-Led Conservation

Goodall, Jane; Goodall, Jane

ESRI Press

10/2022

400

Dura

Inglês

9781589486461

15 a 20 dias

625

Descrição não disponível.
Foreword by Jack Dangermond


Introduction: The birth of Tacare by Jane Goodall


The Jane Goodall Institute's method of community-led conservation.


1 The human-made island: Mzee Jumanne Kikwale meets Jane Goodall at an impressionable age. Dr. Anthony Collins arrives to study Gombe's baboons.


2 Paradigms and problems: Mzee Jumanne Kikwale moves back to Kigoma to teach the next generation about trees. Dr. Anthony Collins recalls Tacare's earliest steps - and missteps.


3 1994: Understanding deforestation: George Strunden and the genesis of TACARE.


4 1994: The forester: Mzee Aristides Kashula sees both the forests and the trees.


5 Cultivating a holistic approach: Mzee Emmanuel Mtiti dances with donors.


6 Creating a common language: Dr. Lilian Pintea uses mapping technologies to develop a dialogue between communities and conservationists.


7 Local ambassadors: Learning from and speaking for the chimps: Gabo Paulo, Eslom Mpongo, Hamisi Mkono, Fatuma Kifumu, and Yahaya Almas reflect on decades of chimp observation at Gombe.


8 A confluence of disciplines: Dr. Shadrack Kamenya explains why indigenous researchers are essential to outreach efforts. Dr. Deus Mjungu dedicates his career to creating habitat corridors for endangered wildlife.


9 The cycles of old and new: Japhet Mwanang'ombe educates and inspires the younger generation. Hamisi Matama preserves the traditional ecological knowledge his mother taught him.


10 Seeking homeostasis: KANYACODA, VHTs, PFOs, KIKACODA: Working toward human and ecological health in Uganda.


11 The fatal interface KACODA, Uganda: Finding successful strategies to reduce human/chimp conflict.


12 From the cloud to the ground: Ugandan Wildlife Authority: Obed Kareebi, Frank Sarube, and


Philemon Tumwebaze on poverty, technology, and conservation.


13 Outreach through fire: Dario Merlo hears Jane's words of hope as bombs fall on Goma.


14 The banks and the bees: Phoebe Samwel links microcredit to women's empowerment Kapeeka Integrated Community Development Association (KICODA) harvests honey - and venom.


15 Changing the retirement plan: Mama Sonja manages difficult conversations about choice.


16 Of women champions: Alice Macharia paves the way for African women in conservation. Yakaka Saweya explains why so many village girls don't complete their education.


17 The cycle of regeneration: Alice Macharia is in it for the long term - and the short term.


18 A "talking office" with maps: Joseline Nyangoma, Hoima district natural resources officer, wants


science to tell a story.


19 People, pixels, and puff adders: Dr. Lilian Pintea contemplates different ways of knowing.


Conclusion
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conservation international; hugo van lawick; environmental conservation; nature conservation; nature preservation; dr jane goodall; roots and shoots; jgi; jane goodall institution