Abstract:
Communitybasednaturalresourcemanagement(CBNRM)isaconceptthatwas
introduced in southern Africa back in the
s with the dual aim of biodiversity
conservation and poverty reduction in communities endowed with natural
resources. Communitybased tourism (CBT), one of the major forms of CBNRM,
depends on natural resources, particularly wildlife, and weather and climatic
conditions. However, natural resources are under threat from climatic changes
and other anthropogenic and natural disturbances. This calls for the need to
interrogate the extent to which CBNRM initiatives mainstream climate change
in their agenda. The main aim of this article is to assess the extent to which
the climate change agenda has been mainstreamed into the policy framework
of Botswana’s CBNRM program. The specific objectives are to ( ) document
the impacts of climate change on CBNRMrelated initiatives in Botswana;
( ) determine the relationship between climate parameters (temperature and
rainfall), extreme events (drought and extreme heat), and visitor trends in
Botswana and the Okavango Delta; ( ) establish a historical correlation between
evolution of climate change policy and CBNRM policy and vice versa, policy
initiatives, programs, strategies, and projects in Botswana; ( ) explore the extent
to which international, regional, national, and local climate policies mainstream
CBNRM and tourism issues and vice versa; and ( ) explore the challenges
and opportunities related to climate change and CBNRM, with a particular
focus on adaptation and mitigation initiatives. This study mostly used qualitative
approaches(desktopreviewofpolicydocumentsandscholarlyarticles)aswellas
secondaryquantitativedata(timeseriesdata)toexploretheevolutionofCBNRM
in Botswana, providing an overview of its structure, policy initiatives, programs,
and projects and how these correspond with climate change issues. A scoping
review was conducted to identify relevant studies on the impacts of climate
change on CBNRM initiatives published between
and
. A total of
articles wereidentifiedtoanswerthefollowingresearchquestion:Whatevidence
is available regarding the impacts of climate change on CBNRM initiatives? The
article further looks at how climate change–related extreme events, particularly
drought, has a ected tourism performance over the years. The article then
zeros down on the e ects of climate change on CBNRM initiatives and the
challenges, threats, and opportunities, as well as the mitigation and adaptation
strategies adopted by the CBNRM projects in Botswana. The findings indicate
FrontiersinSustainableTourism
frontiersin.org
Chikuta et al.
.
/frsut.
.
that climate change–induced events, particularly drought, have a ected
naturebased tourism products in Botswana. However, it was revealed that
although there is no statistically significant correlation between drought and
tourism performance, evidence from the literature reveals that drought has
impacted tourism in Botswana. The findings from policy analysis indicate
that the climate change agenda is woven into more recent key legal and
policy documents on CBNRM, on one hand, while the climate change policy
documents also include components that speak to CBNRM, on the other. This
implies that the tourism sector can leverage these provisions to strengthen
climate resilience through transformative adaptation and mitigation action.