In the 1970s, Kenya had about six times as many elephants as Zimbabwe, and today Zimbabwe has three times more elephants than Kenya (see chart).  What happened that caused the dramatic reversal in elephant populations in the two African countries? 
Between 1989 and 2005, Zimbabwe’s total elephant population more than  doubled from 37,000 to 85,000, with half living outside of national  parks. Today, some put the number as high as 100,000, even after decades of legal, trophy  hunting. All of this has occurred with an economy  in shambles, regime uncertainty, and mounting socio-political  challenges."
See a related CD post here on how private property rights, legalized hunting, commercial farming, and the commercial sale of alligator meat and hides saved the American alligator from extinction.
Terry Anderson and Shawn Regan of the Property and Environment Research Center (PERC) explain in their excellent article "Shoot an Elephant, Save a Community":
"Anti-hunting groups succeeded in getting Kenya to ban all hunting in  1977. Since then, its population of large wild animals has declined  between 60 and 70 percent. The country’s elephant population declined  from 167,000 in 1973 to just 16,000 in 1989. Poaching took its toll on  elephants because of their damage to both cropland and people. Today  Kenya wildlife officials boast a doubling of the country’s elephant  population to 32,000, but nearly all are in protected national parks  where poaching can be controlled.
In sharp contrast to Kenya, consider what has happened in Zimbabwe.  In 1989, results-oriented groups such as the World Wildlife Fund helped  implement a program known as the Communal Areas Management Program for  Indigenous Resources or CAMPFIRE. This approach devolves the rights to  benefit from, dispose of, and manage natural resources to the local  level, including the right to allow safari hunting. Community leaders  with local knowledge about wildlife and its interface with humans help  establish sustainable hunting quotas. Hunting then provides jobs for  community members, compensation for crop and property damage, revenue to  build schools, clinics, and water wells, and meat for villagers.
By granting local people control over wildlife resources, their  incentive to protect it has strengthened. As a result, poaching has been  contained and human-wildlife conflicts have been reduced. While  challenges remain, especially from the current political climate in  Zimbabwe, CAMPFIRE has quietly produced results with strikingly little  activist rhetoric.
See a related CD post here on how private property rights, legalized hunting, commercial farming, and the commercial sale of alligator meat and hides saved the American alligator from extinction.
Post Title
→How To Save the Elephants? Buy Ivory, Shoot Them
Post URL
→https://manufacturing-holdings.blogspot.com/2011/06/how-to-save-elephants-buy-ivory-shoot.html
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