Natural resources degradation threatens the persistence of biological resources in many parts of Eastern and Southern African regions. In these regions, property rights regimes intractably influence resource utilization and biodiversity conservation. Hitherto, the underlying causes of varied performances of property rights regimes are rarely collated. Consequently, resource policies are often flawed, resulting in pervasive systems failure and biodiversity losses. In this study, this particular information gap is interrogated by systematically reviewing various property rights regimes, their influence on resource utilization and biodiversity conservation from wealthy of available literature. The results unravelled that the performance of various property rights regimes is influenced by levels of social capital, encompassing stakeholders’ participation, trust, commitment and social networking at the base regardless of whether the property rights are full hegemony or sanctioned by higher authorities. This finding closely approximates the concept of environmental subsidiarity in natural resource management . Further, it is concluded that bottom-up self-institutional regulation and top-down state control play complimentary if not invasive roles to each other. These approaches stimulate sustainable resource utilisation and biodiversity conservation, where legal actors are given full resource property rights to access, own, utilise and exclude intruders to avoid the ‘tragedy of the commons.
Property Rights Regimes, Resource Utilisation and Biodiversity Conservation in Eastern and Southern Africa
Year: 2015