Determinants of compliance with hunting regulations under Joint Forest Management in Tanzania

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Determinants of compliance with hunting regulations under Joint Forest Management in Tanzania. / Nielsen, Martin Reinhardt; Meilby, Henrik.

I: South African Journal of Wildlife Research, Bind 43, Nr. 2, 2013, s. 120-137.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Nielsen, MR & Meilby, H 2013, 'Determinants of compliance with hunting regulations under Joint Forest Management in Tanzania', South African Journal of Wildlife Research, bind 43, nr. 2, s. 120-137. https://doi.org/10.3957/056.043.0210

APA

Nielsen, M. R., & Meilby, H. (2013). Determinants of compliance with hunting regulations under Joint Forest Management in Tanzania. South African Journal of Wildlife Research, 43(2), 120-137. https://doi.org/10.3957/056.043.0210

Vancouver

Nielsen MR, Meilby H. Determinants of compliance with hunting regulations under Joint Forest Management in Tanzania. South African Journal of Wildlife Research. 2013;43(2):120-137. https://doi.org/10.3957/056.043.0210

Author

Nielsen, Martin Reinhardt ; Meilby, Henrik. / Determinants of compliance with hunting regulations under Joint Forest Management in Tanzania. I: South African Journal of Wildlife Research. 2013 ; Bind 43, Nr. 2. s. 120-137.

Bibtex

@article{e6dca97094da44c395f3285664b8a04d,
title = "Determinants of compliance with hunting regulations under Joint Forest Management in Tanzania",
abstract = "We evaluated the effect of Joint Forest Management (JFM) on the number of bushmeat hunters in a forest reserve in the Udzungwa Mountains of Tanzania and tested whether their response to regulations was best characterized by instrumental or normative explanations. A multinomial model based on instrumental proxies revealed that hunters were characterized by significantly lower household asset value, agricultural area cultivated and education level compared to non-hunters. Stronger explanation was revealed by a model based on normative proxies with hunters being characterized by dissatisfaction with, and perceiving low benefits from JFM, less participation in village meetings and JFM activities and by distrusting the financial management of JFM funds. No model was able to differentiate clearly between individuals that stopped or continued hunting. Focus group discussions with hunters, however, supported the quantitative results and provided the missing clues to differentiate between these groups.In combination the results suggest that continued hunting is motivated primarily by normative reasoning whereas compliance is explained by instrumental considerations. This suggests that a number of fundamental changes are required of JFM in order to ensure hunters{\textquoteright} compliance and thereby conserve the unique biodiversity of this component of the Eastern Afromontane biodiversity hotspot.",
author = "Nielsen, {Martin Reinhardt} and Henrik Meilby",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.3957/056.043.0210",
language = "English",
volume = "43",
pages = "120--137",
journal = "South African Journal of Wildlife Research",
issn = "0379-4369",
publisher = "South African Bureau for Scientific Publications",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Determinants of compliance with hunting regulations under Joint Forest Management in Tanzania

AU - Nielsen, Martin Reinhardt

AU - Meilby, Henrik

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - We evaluated the effect of Joint Forest Management (JFM) on the number of bushmeat hunters in a forest reserve in the Udzungwa Mountains of Tanzania and tested whether their response to regulations was best characterized by instrumental or normative explanations. A multinomial model based on instrumental proxies revealed that hunters were characterized by significantly lower household asset value, agricultural area cultivated and education level compared to non-hunters. Stronger explanation was revealed by a model based on normative proxies with hunters being characterized by dissatisfaction with, and perceiving low benefits from JFM, less participation in village meetings and JFM activities and by distrusting the financial management of JFM funds. No model was able to differentiate clearly between individuals that stopped or continued hunting. Focus group discussions with hunters, however, supported the quantitative results and provided the missing clues to differentiate between these groups.In combination the results suggest that continued hunting is motivated primarily by normative reasoning whereas compliance is explained by instrumental considerations. This suggests that a number of fundamental changes are required of JFM in order to ensure hunters’ compliance and thereby conserve the unique biodiversity of this component of the Eastern Afromontane biodiversity hotspot.

AB - We evaluated the effect of Joint Forest Management (JFM) on the number of bushmeat hunters in a forest reserve in the Udzungwa Mountains of Tanzania and tested whether their response to regulations was best characterized by instrumental or normative explanations. A multinomial model based on instrumental proxies revealed that hunters were characterized by significantly lower household asset value, agricultural area cultivated and education level compared to non-hunters. Stronger explanation was revealed by a model based on normative proxies with hunters being characterized by dissatisfaction with, and perceiving low benefits from JFM, less participation in village meetings and JFM activities and by distrusting the financial management of JFM funds. No model was able to differentiate clearly between individuals that stopped or continued hunting. Focus group discussions with hunters, however, supported the quantitative results and provided the missing clues to differentiate between these groups.In combination the results suggest that continued hunting is motivated primarily by normative reasoning whereas compliance is explained by instrumental considerations. This suggests that a number of fundamental changes are required of JFM in order to ensure hunters’ compliance and thereby conserve the unique biodiversity of this component of the Eastern Afromontane biodiversity hotspot.

U2 - 10.3957/056.043.0210

DO - 10.3957/056.043.0210

M3 - Journal article

VL - 43

SP - 120

EP - 137

JO - South African Journal of Wildlife Research

JF - South African Journal of Wildlife Research

SN - 0379-4369

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 99356011