A quasiexperimental study of impacts of Tanzania's wildlife management areas on rural livelihoods and wealth

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A quasiexperimental study of impacts of Tanzania's wildlife management areas on rural livelihoods and wealth. / Bluwstein, Jevgeniy; Homewood, Katherine; Lund, Jens Friis; Nielsen, Martin Reinhardt; Burgess, Neil David; Msuha, Maurus; Olila, Joseph; Sankeni, Sironka Stephen; Millia, Supuku Kiroiya; Laizer, Hudson; Elisante, Filemon; Keane, Aidan.

I: Scientific Data, Bind 5, 180087, 2018.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Bluwstein, J, Homewood, K, Lund, JF, Nielsen, MR, Burgess, ND, Msuha, M, Olila, J, Sankeni, SS, Millia, SK, Laizer, H, Elisante, F & Keane, A 2018, 'A quasiexperimental study of impacts of Tanzania's wildlife management areas on rural livelihoods and wealth', Scientific Data, bind 5, 180087. https://doi.org/10.1038/sdata.2018.87

APA

Bluwstein, J., Homewood, K., Lund, J. F., Nielsen, M. R., Burgess, N. D., Msuha, M., Olila, J., Sankeni, S. S., Millia, S. K., Laizer, H., Elisante, F., & Keane, A. (2018). A quasiexperimental study of impacts of Tanzania's wildlife management areas on rural livelihoods and wealth. Scientific Data, 5, [180087]. https://doi.org/10.1038/sdata.2018.87

Vancouver

Bluwstein J, Homewood K, Lund JF, Nielsen MR, Burgess ND, Msuha M o.a. A quasiexperimental study of impacts of Tanzania's wildlife management areas on rural livelihoods and wealth. Scientific Data. 2018;5. 180087. https://doi.org/10.1038/sdata.2018.87

Author

Bluwstein, Jevgeniy ; Homewood, Katherine ; Lund, Jens Friis ; Nielsen, Martin Reinhardt ; Burgess, Neil David ; Msuha, Maurus ; Olila, Joseph ; Sankeni, Sironka Stephen ; Millia, Supuku Kiroiya ; Laizer, Hudson ; Elisante, Filemon ; Keane, Aidan. / A quasiexperimental study of impacts of Tanzania's wildlife management areas on rural livelihoods and wealth. I: Scientific Data. 2018 ; Bind 5.

Bibtex

@article{0e439a8558ec434e90d3813587596fe5,
title = "A quasiexperimental study of impacts of Tanzania's wildlife management areas on rural livelihoods and wealth",
abstract = "Since the 2000s, Tanzania's natural resource management policy has emphasised Wildlife Management Areas (WMAs), designed to promote wildlife and biodiversity conservation, poverty alleviation and rural development. We carried out a quasi-experimental impact evaluation of social impacts of WMAs, collecting data from 24 villages participating in 6 different WMAs across two geographical regions, and 18 statistically matched control villages. Across these 42 villages, we collected participatory wealth ranking data for 13,578 households. Using this as our sampling frame, we conducted questionnaire surveys with a stratified sample of 1,924 household heads and 945 household heads' wives. All data were collected in 2014/15, with a subset of questions devoted to respondents' recall on conditions that existed in 2007, when first WMAs became operational. Questions addressed household demographics, land and livestock assets, resource use, income-generating activities and portfolios, participation in natural resource management decision-making, benefits and costs of conservation. Datasets permit research on livelihood and wealth trajectories, and social impacts, costs and benefits of conservation interventions in the context of community-based natural resource management.",
author = "Jevgeniy Bluwstein and Katherine Homewood and Lund, {Jens Friis} and Nielsen, {Martin Reinhardt} and Burgess, {Neil David} and Maurus Msuha and Joseph Olila and Sankeni, {Sironka Stephen} and Millia, {Supuku Kiroiya} and Hudson Laizer and Filemon Elisante and Aidan Keane",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1038/sdata.2018.87",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
journal = "Scientific data",
issn = "2052-4463",
publisher = "nature publishing group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A quasiexperimental study of impacts of Tanzania's wildlife management areas on rural livelihoods and wealth

AU - Bluwstein, Jevgeniy

AU - Homewood, Katherine

AU - Lund, Jens Friis

AU - Nielsen, Martin Reinhardt

AU - Burgess, Neil David

AU - Msuha, Maurus

AU - Olila, Joseph

AU - Sankeni, Sironka Stephen

AU - Millia, Supuku Kiroiya

AU - Laizer, Hudson

AU - Elisante, Filemon

AU - Keane, Aidan

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Since the 2000s, Tanzania's natural resource management policy has emphasised Wildlife Management Areas (WMAs), designed to promote wildlife and biodiversity conservation, poverty alleviation and rural development. We carried out a quasi-experimental impact evaluation of social impacts of WMAs, collecting data from 24 villages participating in 6 different WMAs across two geographical regions, and 18 statistically matched control villages. Across these 42 villages, we collected participatory wealth ranking data for 13,578 households. Using this as our sampling frame, we conducted questionnaire surveys with a stratified sample of 1,924 household heads and 945 household heads' wives. All data were collected in 2014/15, with a subset of questions devoted to respondents' recall on conditions that existed in 2007, when first WMAs became operational. Questions addressed household demographics, land and livestock assets, resource use, income-generating activities and portfolios, participation in natural resource management decision-making, benefits and costs of conservation. Datasets permit research on livelihood and wealth trajectories, and social impacts, costs and benefits of conservation interventions in the context of community-based natural resource management.

AB - Since the 2000s, Tanzania's natural resource management policy has emphasised Wildlife Management Areas (WMAs), designed to promote wildlife and biodiversity conservation, poverty alleviation and rural development. We carried out a quasi-experimental impact evaluation of social impacts of WMAs, collecting data from 24 villages participating in 6 different WMAs across two geographical regions, and 18 statistically matched control villages. Across these 42 villages, we collected participatory wealth ranking data for 13,578 households. Using this as our sampling frame, we conducted questionnaire surveys with a stratified sample of 1,924 household heads and 945 household heads' wives. All data were collected in 2014/15, with a subset of questions devoted to respondents' recall on conditions that existed in 2007, when first WMAs became operational. Questions addressed household demographics, land and livestock assets, resource use, income-generating activities and portfolios, participation in natural resource management decision-making, benefits and costs of conservation. Datasets permit research on livelihood and wealth trajectories, and social impacts, costs and benefits of conservation interventions in the context of community-based natural resource management.

U2 - 10.1038/sdata.2018.87

DO - 10.1038/sdata.2018.87

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29969117

AN - SCOPUS:85049516113

VL - 5

JO - Scientific data

JF - Scientific data

SN - 2052-4463

M1 - 180087

ER -

ID: 199598495