Political ecology survey of human-chimpanzee coexistence within postwar Mabi-Yaya Nature Reserve, Côte d’Ivoire

Côte d'Ivoire’s commercial agriculture policy, coupled with military and civil unrest since the late 1990s, has induced very high tensions with conservation agendas, outside of protected areas as well as within them. This situation has made human-chimpanzee coexistence in shared landscapes near...

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Main Authors: Sasha Pruvost, Vincent Leblan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Société Francophone de Primatologie 2024-11-01
Series:Revue de Primatologie
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/primatologie/20325
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author Sasha Pruvost
Vincent Leblan
author_facet Sasha Pruvost
Vincent Leblan
author_sort Sasha Pruvost
collection DOAJ
description Côte d'Ivoire’s commercial agriculture policy, coupled with military and civil unrest since the late 1990s, has induced very high tensions with conservation agendas, outside of protected areas as well as within them. This situation has made human-chimpanzee coexistence in shared landscapes nearly impossible, except, paradoxically and unsustainably, within protected areas. The Mabi-Yaya Nature Reserve, which was gazetted in 2019 by merging and upgrading two classified forests, is emblematic in this regard. This article examines the recent history of human and chimpanzee presence within the reserve in relation to the country’s political turmoil, based on printed sources and oral accounts as well as a chimpanzee survey. It also questions the motivations for the inhabitants’ unexpected level of support for the reserve reported by a conservation NGO, as well as the reasons for the possibly related absence of large-scale deforestation within it. Given the Ivorian political context, this local support and the persistence of high canopy forest appear to be more related to a local understanding of the protected area as a land-securing device against “outsiders” in a context of strong political and identity crises than to any agreement with conservation policies. This has implications for the conservation of Mabi-Yaya’s remaining chimpanzees and other postwar Ivorian protected areas. It also questions the governance of such a reserve in a political situation still prone to high-level conflicts among neighboring communities.
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spelling doaj-art-dd5a4f94d94d4e12839abc4fb83e91362025-01-30T10:02:34ZengSociété Francophone de PrimatologieRevue de Primatologie2077-37572024-11-011510.4000/12p0sPolitical ecology survey of human-chimpanzee coexistence within postwar Mabi-Yaya Nature Reserve, Côte d’IvoireSasha PruvostVincent LeblanCôte d'Ivoire’s commercial agriculture policy, coupled with military and civil unrest since the late 1990s, has induced very high tensions with conservation agendas, outside of protected areas as well as within them. This situation has made human-chimpanzee coexistence in shared landscapes nearly impossible, except, paradoxically and unsustainably, within protected areas. The Mabi-Yaya Nature Reserve, which was gazetted in 2019 by merging and upgrading two classified forests, is emblematic in this regard. This article examines the recent history of human and chimpanzee presence within the reserve in relation to the country’s political turmoil, based on printed sources and oral accounts as well as a chimpanzee survey. It also questions the motivations for the inhabitants’ unexpected level of support for the reserve reported by a conservation NGO, as well as the reasons for the possibly related absence of large-scale deforestation within it. Given the Ivorian political context, this local support and the persistence of high canopy forest appear to be more related to a local understanding of the protected area as a land-securing device against “outsiders” in a context of strong political and identity crises than to any agreement with conservation policies. This has implications for the conservation of Mabi-Yaya’s remaining chimpanzees and other postwar Ivorian protected areas. It also questions the governance of such a reserve in a political situation still prone to high-level conflicts among neighboring communities.https://journals.openedition.org/primatologie/20325protected areaschimpanzeeMabi-Yaya Nature Reserve (Côte d’Ivoire)land-use rightswar
spellingShingle Sasha Pruvost
Vincent Leblan
Political ecology survey of human-chimpanzee coexistence within postwar Mabi-Yaya Nature Reserve, Côte d’Ivoire
Revue de Primatologie
protected areas
chimpanzee
Mabi-Yaya Nature Reserve (Côte d’Ivoire)
land-use rights
war
title Political ecology survey of human-chimpanzee coexistence within postwar Mabi-Yaya Nature Reserve, Côte d’Ivoire
title_full Political ecology survey of human-chimpanzee coexistence within postwar Mabi-Yaya Nature Reserve, Côte d’Ivoire
title_fullStr Political ecology survey of human-chimpanzee coexistence within postwar Mabi-Yaya Nature Reserve, Côte d’Ivoire
title_full_unstemmed Political ecology survey of human-chimpanzee coexistence within postwar Mabi-Yaya Nature Reserve, Côte d’Ivoire
title_short Political ecology survey of human-chimpanzee coexistence within postwar Mabi-Yaya Nature Reserve, Côte d’Ivoire
title_sort political ecology survey of human chimpanzee coexistence within postwar mabi yaya nature reserve cote d ivoire
topic protected areas
chimpanzee
Mabi-Yaya Nature Reserve (Côte d’Ivoire)
land-use rights
war
url https://journals.openedition.org/primatologie/20325
work_keys_str_mv AT sashapruvost politicalecologysurveyofhumanchimpanzeecoexistencewithinpostwarmabiyayanaturereservecotedivoire
AT vincentleblan politicalecologysurveyofhumanchimpanzeecoexistencewithinpostwarmabiyayanaturereservecotedivoire