GGR345H5 Chapter Notes - Chapter 1: Political Ecology, Habitat Destruction, Land Degradation

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25 Dec 2012
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Reason: private holding and investment in export cereal grains on the kenyan side of the border. The most prominent of these apolitical approaches, which tend to dominate in global. Habitat loss and wildlife decline appear both more complex and more connected to the daily lives and routines of urban people in the developed world. Cross-border analysis shows the decline in habitat and wildlife in kenya is far higher than in tanzania have led to intensive cropping and the decline of habitat. Less developed agricultural markets and less fully privatized land tenure systems in tanzania means less pressure on wildlife. The wildlife crisis in east africa is more political and economic than demographic. Money and pressure for wild life enclosure, which fund the removal or native populations from the land, continue to come largely from multilateral institutions and first world environmentalists.

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