Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T17:06:28.532Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Maoist people's war and conservation in Nepal

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 May 2016

Nabin Baral
Affiliation:
Department of Environmental Studies Florida International University 11200 S.W. Eighth Street Miami, FL 33199 nbaral@gmail.comheinenj@fiu.edu
Joel T. Heinen
Affiliation:
Department of Environmental Studies Florida International University 11200 S.W. Eighth Street Miami, FL 33199 nbaral@gmail.comheinenj@fiu.edu
Get access

Abstract

Civil wars are frequent in lesser-developed nations, wherein is harbored a disproportionate share of the world's biodiversity. These wars have had serious detrimental effects, direct and indirect, on conservation programs. From 2001 to 2005, we conducted site visits, personal interviews, and document searches bearing upon this problem as exemplified by Nepal's ongoing Maoist insurgency. Cases of insurgents usurping full control of several protected areas have come to light, as has a rapid increase in poaching and illicit wildlife trade nation-wide. Staff and infrastructure of conservation agencies and non-governmental organizations have been attacked. The Nepalese situation invites reassessment of traditional “fortresses-and-fines” conservation strategies as well as more modern “community-based” approaches that require local governmental offices to remain functional. Also called into question is the role of military force in the protection of parks and reserves. In times of civil strife, we conclude, robust conservation may most likely be achieved by nongovernmental organizations that are politically neutral and financially independent.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Politics and the Life Sciences 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Hamilton, A., Cunningham, A., Byarugaba, D., and Kayanja, F., “Conservation in a region of political instability: Bwindi Impenetrable Forest, Uganda,” Conservation Biology, 2000, 14(6): 17221725.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2. Kane, H., “The hour of departure: Forces that create refugees and migrants,” Paper 125 (Washington, D.C.: World Watch, 1995).Google Scholar
3. Collier, P., Economic causes of civil conflict and their implications for policy (Washington, D.C.: World Bank, 2000).Google Scholar
4. Dudley, J. P., Ginsberg, J. R., Plumptre, A. J., Hart, J. A., and Campos, L. C., “Effects of war and civil strife on wildlife and wildlife habitats,” Conservation Biology, 2002, 16(2): 319329.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5. Davalos, L. M., “The San Lucas mountain range of Colombia: How much conservation is owed to the violence?” Biodiversity and Conservation, 2001, 10:6978.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6. War and Tropical Forests: Conservation in Areas of Armed Conflicts, Price, S. V., ed. (New York: Food Products Press, 2003).Google Scholar
7. Sperling, L., “The effect of the civil war on Rwanda's bean seed systems and unusual bean diversity,” Biodiversity and Conservation, 2001, 10:9891009.Google Scholar
8. Myers, N., Ultimate Security: The Environmental Basis of Political Stability (Washington, D.C.: Island Press, 1996).Google Scholar
9. Kanyamibwa, S., “Impact of war on conservation: Rwandan environment and wildlife in agony,” Biodiversity and Conservation, 1998, 7:13991406.Google Scholar
10. Heinen, J. T. and Kattel, B., “Parks, people, and conservation: A review of management issues in Nepal's protected areas,” Population and Environment, 1992, 14(1): 4984.Google Scholar
11. “Special Report Nepal: Himalayan Horrors,” Economist, April 16, 2005.Google Scholar
12. Himalayan People's War: Nepal's Maoist Rebellion, Hutt, M., ed. (Indianapolis, USA: Indiana University Press, 2004).Google Scholar
13. Thapa, D. and Sijapati, B., A kingdom under siege: Nepal's Maoist insurgency, 1996 to 2003 (Kathmandu, Nepal: The Printhouse, 2003).Google Scholar
14. Karki, A. and Bhattarai, B., eds., Whose War? Economic and Socio-Cultural Impacts of Nepal's Maoist-Government Conflict (Kathmandu, Nepal: NGO Federation of Nepal, 2004).Google Scholar
15. Gregson, J., Massacre at the Palace: The Doomed Royal Dynasty of Nepal (New York: Hyperion Publication, 2002).Google Scholar
16. Raj, P. A., Maoists in the Land of Buddha: An Analytical Study of the Maoist Insurgency in Nepal (New Delhi, India: Nirala Publications, 2004).Google Scholar
17. Nepali, S., Impacts of a Political Conflict in Conservation and Livelihoods (Kathmandu, Nepal: Unpublished report submitted to WWF — Nepal Program, 2004).Google Scholar
18. Budhathoki, P., “Nepal's conservation in crisis: Empowering people to secure natural resources,” Journal of Forest and Livelihood, 2003, 2(2): 7275.Google Scholar
19. Phuyal, S. and Adhikari, S., “Makalu Barun: Where illegal wildlife traders are defying Maoist rule,” Kathmandu Post, January 30, 2003.Google Scholar
20. Gautam, G., “Poachers rule the roost in hunting reserve,” Himalayan Times, July 9, 2004.Google Scholar
21. Chaudhary, R. P., Biodiversity in Nepal: Status and Conservation (Bangkok, Thailand: Craftsman Press, 1998).Google Scholar
22. Hart, T. and Hart, J., “Conservation and civil strife: Two perspectives from central Africa,” Conservation Biology, 1997, 11(2): 308314.Google Scholar
23. Paudyal, D. P., Strategies for Local Development in Nepal: An Evaluation of the Decentralization Act of 1982 from the Local Perspective (Kathmandu, Nepal: Prabesh and Pratik Publishers, 1994).Google Scholar
24. Heinen, J. T., “Park-people relations in Koshi Tappu Wildlife Reserve, Nepal: A socio-economic analysis,” Environmental Conservation, 1993, 20(1): 2534.Google Scholar
25. Heinen, J. T. and Mehta, J. N., “Emerging issues in legal and procedural aspects of buffer zone management with case studies from Nepal,” Journal of Environment and Development, 2000, 9(1): 4567.Google Scholar
26. Dhakal, R. N., “Poachers rule the roost in Annapurna range,” Himalayan Times, December 4, 2004.Google Scholar
27. Baral, Nabin, Resources Use and Conservation Attitudes of Local People in the Western Terai Landscape, Nepal (Miami, USA: M.Sc. Thesis, Florida International University, 2005).Google Scholar
28. Gilmour, D., “Retrospective and prospective view of community forestry in Nepal,” Journal of Forest and Livelihood, 2003, 2:57.Google Scholar
29. Goldstone, J. A., “Saving the environment (and political stability too): Institutional responses for developing nations,” Environmental Change and Security Report, 1996, 2:3334.Google Scholar
30. Martin, P. S. and Szuter, C., “War zones and game sinks in Lewis and Clark's west,” Conservation Biology, 1999, 13(1): 3645.Google Scholar
31. Eltringham, S. K. and Malpas, R. C., “The conservation status of Uganda's game and forest reserves in 1982 and 1983,” African journal of Ecology, 1993, 31:91105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
32. Formoli, T. A., “The impacts of the Afghan-Soviet war on Afghanistan's environment,” Environmental Conservation, 1995, 22:6669.Google Scholar
33. Vogel, G., “Conflict in Congo threatens bonobos and rare gorillas,” Science, 2000, 287:2386–87.Google Scholar
34. Tripathy, B., “Poaching reduces red panda population,” Kathmandu Post, December 30, 2003.Google Scholar
35. Mainali, K. P., “Sharp decline in Nepal's rhino population,” Frontiers in Ecology and Environment, 2005, 5(3): 239.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
36. Chapagain, K., “Thirty-four rhinos killed in eight months,” Kathmandu Post, December 20, 2002.Google Scholar
37. “Security negligence cause of rhino deaths,” Rising Nepal, March 1, 2003.Google Scholar
38. Aryal, R. S., CITES Implementation in Nepal and India (Kathmandu, Nepal: Bhrikuti Academic Publication, 2004).Google Scholar
39. Heinen, J. T. and Chapagain, D. P., “On the expansion of species protection in Nepal: Advances and pitfalls of new efforts to implement and comply with CITES,” Journal of International Wildlife Law and Policy, 2002, 5:235250.Google Scholar
40. Belbase, N., The Implementation of International Environmental Law in Nepal (Kathmandu, Nepal: IUCN—The World Conservation Union, 1997).Google Scholar
41. Sharma, D. G., “Dalai Lama supports conservation campaign,” Frontier in Ecology and Evolution, 2005, 3(5): 240.Google Scholar
42. “Nepal transit point of wildlife trade in South Asia,” Rising Nepal, July 15, 2004.Google Scholar
43. Khtary-Chhetri, S., “Nepal still a hotspot for illegal wildlife traders,” Kathamandu Post, April 27, 2004.Google Scholar
44. “Huge cache of animal skins, bones recovered,” Kathmandu Post, March 30, 2004.Google Scholar
45. Fox, D., “Case study: Healing powers,” Conservation in Practice, 2005, 6(1): 2934.Google Scholar
46. Chengappa, R., “The missing tigers,” India Today, May 23, 2005.Google Scholar
47. Heinen, J. T. and Shrestha, S., “Evolving policies for conservation: An historical profile of the protected area system of Nepal,” Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 2006, 49(1): 4158.Google Scholar
48. Alvarez, M. D., “Forests in the time of violence: Conservation implications of the Colombian war,” in War and Tropical Forests: Conservation in Areas of Armed Conflicts, Price, S. V., ed., (New York: Food Products Press, 2005), pp. 4970.Google Scholar
49. Kaimowitz, D. and Faune, A., “Contras and commandants: Armed movements and forest conservation in Nicaragua's Bosawas Biosphere Reserve,” in War and Tropical Forests: Conservation in Areas of Armed Conflicts, Price, S. V., ed. (New York: Food Products Press, 2005), pp. 2147.Google Scholar
50. DNPWC, Revenue Generation in Protected Areas, His Majesty's Government of Nepal, Kathmandu, http://www.dnpwc.gov.np/ (accessed February 9, 2005).Google Scholar
51. Wunder, S., “Ecotourism and economic incentives — an empirical approach,” Ecological Economics, 2000, 32:465479.Google Scholar
52. Plumptre, A. J., Bizumuremi, J. B., Uwimana, F., and Ndaruhebeye, J. D., “The effects of the Rwandan civil war on the poaching of ungulates in the Parc National des Volcans,” Oryx, 1997, 31:265273.Google Scholar
53. Sembajjwe, W. S. G., “Sacred forests in Ganda society,” Uganda Journal, 1995, 42:3244.Google Scholar
54. Sekhar, N. U., “Crop and livestock depredation caused by wild animals in protected areas: The case of Sariska Tiger Reserve, Rajasthan, India,” Environmental Conservation, 1998, 25(2): 160171.Google Scholar
55. Bajrachayra, S. B., Community Involvement in Conservation: An Assessment of Impacts and Implications in the Annapurna Conservation Area, Nepal (UK: Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Edinburgh, 2003).Google Scholar
56. Timilsina, N., Analysis of Forest under Different Management Regimes in the Western Terai of Nepal and Its Relation to Environment and Human Use (Miami, USA: M.Sc. Thesis, Florida International University, 2005).Google Scholar
57. Shrestha, T. N., The Concepts of Local Government and Decentralization (Kathmandu, Nepal: Ratna Pustak Bhandar, 1999).Google Scholar
58. Dahal, D. R., Uprety, H. and Subba, P., Good Governance and Decentralization in Nepal (Kathmandu, Nepal: Center for Governance and Development Studies, 2002).Google Scholar
59. Ale, S. B., “Have Snow Leopards Made a Comeback to the Everest Region of Nepal?” report submitted to International Snow Leopard Trust, Seattle, USA, 2005.Google Scholar