The new green apartheid? Race, capital and logics of enclosure in South Africa’s wildlife economy

In this paper, we explore relations between race, capital and wildlife conservation in the town of Hoedspruit and its surroundings, which has developed into one of the main centres of the lucrative and rapidly growing ‘wildlife economy’ in South Africa. Behind its image as a shining ‘green’ example of wildlife-based development is a highly unequal and racialised state of affairs that is deeply unsustainable. At the core of these dynamics are private wildlife reserves, high-end nature-based tourism and gated ‘wildlife estates’, which have further consolidated land into private, mostly white, ownership. In addition to contestations about the building of a shopping mall and land claims, Hoedspruit’s wildlife economy is dependent upon black labourers who commute daily from former homeland areas. Municipal efforts to mediate this situation by building affordable housing, have been thwarted by several wealthy inhabitants and property developers. We build on Mbembe’s ‘logic of enclosure’ to argue that the wildlife economy and its ‘green’ image perpetuate and reinvent older forms of colonial and apartheid geographies of segregation, in effect creating a form of ‘new green apartheid’. While physical-geographical enclosures are at the centre of the wildlife economy, we show that they are reinforced by class and racial enclosures and ideological enclosures, the latter consisting of both the belief in the market as a natural solution for social and environmental causes and apartheid as an historical era that has now ended. We conclude that Hoedspruit serves as an important example of the regressive and unsustainable forms of development that the wildlife economy in South Africa can create.

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Main Authors: Koot, Stasja, Büscher, Bram, Thakholi, Lerato
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Apartheid, South Africa, enclosures, race, wildlife economy,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/the-new-green-apartheid-race-capital-and-logics-of-enclosure-in-s
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-6030292025-01-14 Koot, Stasja Büscher, Bram Thakholi, Lerato Article/Letter to editor Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space 7 (2024) 1 ISSN: 2514-8486 The new green apartheid? Race, capital and logics of enclosure in South Africa’s wildlife economy 2024 In this paper, we explore relations between race, capital and wildlife conservation in the town of Hoedspruit and its surroundings, which has developed into one of the main centres of the lucrative and rapidly growing ‘wildlife economy’ in South Africa. Behind its image as a shining ‘green’ example of wildlife-based development is a highly unequal and racialised state of affairs that is deeply unsustainable. At the core of these dynamics are private wildlife reserves, high-end nature-based tourism and gated ‘wildlife estates’, which have further consolidated land into private, mostly white, ownership. In addition to contestations about the building of a shopping mall and land claims, Hoedspruit’s wildlife economy is dependent upon black labourers who commute daily from former homeland areas. Municipal efforts to mediate this situation by building affordable housing, have been thwarted by several wealthy inhabitants and property developers. We build on Mbembe’s ‘logic of enclosure’ to argue that the wildlife economy and its ‘green’ image perpetuate and reinvent older forms of colonial and apartheid geographies of segregation, in effect creating a form of ‘new green apartheid’. While physical-geographical enclosures are at the centre of the wildlife economy, we show that they are reinforced by class and racial enclosures and ideological enclosures, the latter consisting of both the belief in the market as a natural solution for social and environmental causes and apartheid as an historical era that has now ended. We conclude that Hoedspruit serves as an important example of the regressive and unsustainable forms of development that the wildlife economy in South Africa can create. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/the-new-green-apartheid-race-capital-and-logics-of-enclosure-in-s 10.1177/25148486221110438 https://edepot.wur.nl/578802 Apartheid South Africa enclosures race wildlife economy https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Apartheid
South Africa
enclosures
race
wildlife economy
Apartheid
South Africa
enclosures
race
wildlife economy
spellingShingle Apartheid
South Africa
enclosures
race
wildlife economy
Apartheid
South Africa
enclosures
race
wildlife economy
Koot, Stasja
Büscher, Bram
Thakholi, Lerato
The new green apartheid? Race, capital and logics of enclosure in South Africa’s wildlife economy
description In this paper, we explore relations between race, capital and wildlife conservation in the town of Hoedspruit and its surroundings, which has developed into one of the main centres of the lucrative and rapidly growing ‘wildlife economy’ in South Africa. Behind its image as a shining ‘green’ example of wildlife-based development is a highly unequal and racialised state of affairs that is deeply unsustainable. At the core of these dynamics are private wildlife reserves, high-end nature-based tourism and gated ‘wildlife estates’, which have further consolidated land into private, mostly white, ownership. In addition to contestations about the building of a shopping mall and land claims, Hoedspruit’s wildlife economy is dependent upon black labourers who commute daily from former homeland areas. Municipal efforts to mediate this situation by building affordable housing, have been thwarted by several wealthy inhabitants and property developers. We build on Mbembe’s ‘logic of enclosure’ to argue that the wildlife economy and its ‘green’ image perpetuate and reinvent older forms of colonial and apartheid geographies of segregation, in effect creating a form of ‘new green apartheid’. While physical-geographical enclosures are at the centre of the wildlife economy, we show that they are reinforced by class and racial enclosures and ideological enclosures, the latter consisting of both the belief in the market as a natural solution for social and environmental causes and apartheid as an historical era that has now ended. We conclude that Hoedspruit serves as an important example of the regressive and unsustainable forms of development that the wildlife economy in South Africa can create.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Apartheid
South Africa
enclosures
race
wildlife economy
author Koot, Stasja
Büscher, Bram
Thakholi, Lerato
author_facet Koot, Stasja
Büscher, Bram
Thakholi, Lerato
author_sort Koot, Stasja
title The new green apartheid? Race, capital and logics of enclosure in South Africa’s wildlife economy
title_short The new green apartheid? Race, capital and logics of enclosure in South Africa’s wildlife economy
title_full The new green apartheid? Race, capital and logics of enclosure in South Africa’s wildlife economy
title_fullStr The new green apartheid? Race, capital and logics of enclosure in South Africa’s wildlife economy
title_full_unstemmed The new green apartheid? Race, capital and logics of enclosure in South Africa’s wildlife economy
title_sort new green apartheid? race, capital and logics of enclosure in south africa’s wildlife economy
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/the-new-green-apartheid-race-capital-and-logics-of-enclosure-in-s
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