01530pab a2200193 454500008004000000100002300040245004900063260000900112300001400121362000800135520093200143650003601075650003801111650002901149773002701178909001001205999001701215952010401232180718b2003 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aDzingirai, Vupenyu aThe new scramble for the African countryside c2003 ap.243-63. aApr aThere is in Africa, as in other parts of the third world, a desire for environmental management that simultaneously incorporates and benefits all stakeholders, including private business and villagers. While these partnerships continue to displace the failed state-centric management of the African landscape, research to document their local-level impact is still formative and developing. This article is an attempt to examine the new environmental management partnerships emerging in southern Africa's countryside. It argues that these new interventions not only fail to deliver benefits to villagers: more importantly, they curtail the long-established rights to land and other natural resources of indigenous communities. While villagers may engage in a battle to recover these rights, it is a struggle in which the odds are stacked against them, and which the private sector and its partners are set to win. - Reproduced. aWild life conservation - Africa aEnvironmental management - Africa aEnvironmental management aDevelopment and Change a57390 c57390d57390 00104070aIIPAbIIPAd2018-07-19hVolume no: 34, Issue no: 2pAR57835r2018-07-19w2018-07-19yAR