Conservation and development: Justice, inequality, and attitudes around Bwindi Impenetrable National Park
Abstract
Do national parks promote development in their immediate surroundings? And is local development
instrumental in the success of conservation goals? We investigated allocation of opportunities and burdens
around a national park in Uganda. Our findings suggest that direct benefits from conservation and development
projects may promote distributional justice by compensating for park-related damages, but are too limited in their
coverage to impact development. Indirect benefits related to transportation, health, education, and security affect
a far greater segment of the population. Furthermore, the benefits of conservation tend to increase local economic
inequality. Contrasting tendencies in terms of distributional justice and economic equality can partly be explained
by the human geography of national parks and this geography must be taken into account if broad development
goals are to be achieved. Improved local attitudes towards the park seem to have resulted from a complex of
effects rather than any single development initiative.