ABSTRACT
This study was carried out in the Kogyare Strict Nature Reserve, an area
considered as ecologically fragile because of its strategic position between the
northern savanna and the tropical rainforest in the South. The objective was to
examine the conflict that has tended to affect the effective management of the
reserve as a Strict Nature Reserve. This was looked at within the framework of
socio-economic factors such as increasing population, claims of ownership and
the general methods of land acquisition and the influence of these in explaining
the incessant misuse of the reserve by inhabitants of the area.
The impact of this misuse, expressed in the degradation of the vegetation
was largely measured using the 1972/73 aerial photograph interpretation as a
base year for the determination of change in land use and cover of the area
using the 1991 Landsat T.M. image of the area. Wildlife was also made
reference to.
Three-hundred and sixty eight respondents were selected from seven
communities, four of which had been affected by the eastward extension of the
original Kujani Bush Forest Reserve in 1971. Opinion leaders, Odikros and
Wildlife Department officials stationed in these communities were also
interviewed for their opinions.
The logistic regression model was employed to identify and explain the
presence of the conflict on the basis of identified proximate variables.
The incidence of conflict was accounted for mostly by claims of ownership
over the area covered by 1971 eastward extension of the reserve and its
resultant difficulty in getting land for farming. Connected with this is the loss of
title to non-timber forest products (NTFP’S) such as wildlife even though these
resources are extensively exploited illegally.
Also, it was observed that ignorance of the laws governing the reserve
was not a major factor in explaining the misuse of the reserve resources. Rather,
this was dictated by the dire need for survival in the face of difficulties associated
with life in most deprived rural areas. The study revealed an extensive
destruction of the reminder of the forest reserve.
It also recommends the encouragement of reafforestation programmes in
the area, improvement in Community-Wildlife Department relations, increased
budgetary allocation to the Wildlife Department and a co-ordination of activities of
NGO’s working in the area with that of the Wildlife Department.
AWUKU-BOR, M (2021). CONFLICTS AND HARMONIES IN LAND USE IN THE KOGYAE STRICT NATURE RESERVE. Afribary. Retrieved from https://afribary.com/works/conflicts-and-harmonies-in-land-use-in-the-kogyae-strict-nature-reserve
AWUKU-BOR, MICHAEL "CONFLICTS AND HARMONIES IN LAND USE IN THE KOGYAE STRICT NATURE RESERVE" Afribary. Afribary, 30 Mar. 2021, https://afribary.com/works/conflicts-and-harmonies-in-land-use-in-the-kogyae-strict-nature-reserve. Accessed 26 Nov. 2024.
AWUKU-BOR, MICHAEL . "CONFLICTS AND HARMONIES IN LAND USE IN THE KOGYAE STRICT NATURE RESERVE". Afribary, Afribary, 30 Mar. 2021. Web. 26 Nov. 2024. < https://afribary.com/works/conflicts-and-harmonies-in-land-use-in-the-kogyae-strict-nature-reserve >.
AWUKU-BOR, MICHAEL . "CONFLICTS AND HARMONIES IN LAND USE IN THE KOGYAE STRICT NATURE RESERVE" Afribary (2021). Accessed November 26, 2024. https://afribary.com/works/conflicts-and-harmonies-in-land-use-in-the-kogyae-strict-nature-reserve