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Green transformations, charcoal and social justice in rural east-central Tanzania

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dc.creator Mabele, Mathew Bukhi
dc.date 2020-11-24T10:26:09Z
dc.date 2020-11-24T10:26:09Z
dc.date 2019
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-20T12:01:02Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-20T12:01:02Z
dc.identifier Mabele, M. B. (2019). Green transformations, charcoal and social justice in rural East-Central Tanzania (STEPS Working Paper 112). Brighton: STEPS Centre.
dc.identifier URL:https://opendocs.ids.ac.uk/opendocs/handle/20.500.12413/14903
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12661/2535
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12661/2535
dc.description Full text article. Also available at https://opendocs.ids.ac.uk/opendocs/handle/20.500.12413/14903
dc.description Over the last 30 years, Tanzania has taken different policy approaches towards the conservation of forests. Intriguingly, from the earlier integrated conservation and development approach to the ‘newer’ green economy, the idea that providing livelihood benefits is a key strategy for achieving conservation effectiveness has dominated. This one-dimensional conception of what ‘local people’ value and why precludes a clear understanding of substantive social justice considerations – what is being contested, why and by whom – when conflicts arise in policy implementation settings. Using a green economy project that addresses charcoal-driven forest loss in Kilosa, the paper examines a conflict between forest conservation and farming, and studies the variegated notions of justice that farmers express in relation to the conflict. The paper builds upon a developing strand in the political ecology literature, that of empirical analyses of rural people’s conceptions of justice in environmental conservation, to demonstrate the analytical and practical values of a multidimensional justice framework. Its main contribution lies in illustrating how the framework can help to assess and reframe environmental interventions, going beyond one-dimensional conceptions, to focus attention on the diverse ways in which justice can be recognised or denied, at different levels and in different ways, for different groups of people. Particularly, it highlights that context matters, as despite the distributional ‘success’ of the project, disregarded concerns over procedural dimensions and the recognition of justice led to farmer evictions, covert resistance and continued struggles over land compensation. This paper therefore underlines that being attentive to a range of justice dimensions can reveal locally valued and contested aspects of conservation, and can guide more equitable and more just environmental conservation.
dc.language en
dc.publisher STEPS Centre
dc.subject Forest conservation
dc.subject Green economy
dc.subject Green economy project
dc.subject Environmental conservation
dc.subject Green transformations
dc.subject Charcoal-driven
dc.subject Forest conservation
dc.subject Charcoal production
dc.subject Conceptions of justice
dc.subject Political ecology
dc.subject Social justice
dc.title Green transformations, charcoal and social justice in rural east-central Tanzania
dc.type Working Paper


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