This book began not as an academic inquiry into conservation policy, but as a journey to understand a profound historical injustice-a fissure that runs through the heart of the Zambezi Valley. It is a story told not by ecologists or colonial administrators, but by the Chikunda people, whose fate has been inextricably linked to the ebb and flow of this great river for centuries. For generations, the Chikunda were the stewards of the middle Zambezi-experts in the rhythms of the flood, masters of sustainable harvest, and custodians of a complex, unwritten system of ecological law known as tsika.
Their knowledge-of fire management (kuoca), fishing closures, and the ritualized relationship with wildlife embodied by the totemic system (mutupo)-was not just folklore; it was a highly effective, adaptive science that sustained both the people and the megafauna of the valley. Then came the rupture. With the imposition of colonial authority in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, this ancient covenant between the Chikunda and their land was violently dissolved.
Driven by the flawed Western ideology of "fortress conservation, " colonial powers declared the Zambezi's most fertile lands and richest wildlife zones as state property-National Parks and Game Reserves-and forcibly displaced the rightful inhabitants. The hunter, the fisher, and the gatherer were instantly transformed into the "native poacher, " a criminal in the eyes of the law. This book argues that the tragic poaching epidemic that ravaged the Zambezi in the post-colonial era was not a failure of the local people, but a direct, predictable outcome of this systemic exclusion.
Colonial policy did not save the wildlife; it destroyed the cultural and economic framework that protected it, replacing stewardship with resentment and poverty. The Chikunda Paradigm: From Exclusion to Shared Destiny seeks to move beyond assigning blame. It is a work of synthesis, combining historical narrative, anthropological analysis of traditional knowledge, and a critique of contemporary conservation policy across Mozambique, Zimbabwe, and Zambia.
More importantly, it is a vision for the future. We argue that the only durable solution to the ongoing human-wildlife crisis is a radical act of inclusion: the formal, legal, and economic restoration of resource management authority to the Chikunda people. This means integrating their Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) with modern science, empowering the mfumo (chiefs) and the mhondoro (spirit mediums) as essential governance partners, and ensuring that the economic value of wildlife is realized directly by the communities who bear the cost of living alongside it.
This is a blueprint for decolonizing conservation. It is a testament to the resilience of a people who refuse to be defined by historical trauma. Ultimately, the story of the Chikunda is a powerful, urgent message for the world: If we wish to save the great ecosystems of this planet, we must first recognize that social justice and ecological health are fundamentally indivisible. We invite you to join us in understanding this essential truth.
This book began not as an academic inquiry into conservation policy, but as a journey to understand a profound historical injustice-a fissure that runs through the heart of the Zambezi Valley. It is a story told not by ecologists or colonial administrators, but by the Chikunda people, whose fate has been inextricably linked to the ebb and flow of this great river for centuries. For generations, the Chikunda were the stewards of the middle Zambezi-experts in the rhythms of the flood, masters of sustainable harvest, and custodians of a complex, unwritten system of ecological law known as tsika.
Their knowledge-of fire management (kuoca), fishing closures, and the ritualized relationship with wildlife embodied by the totemic system (mutupo)-was not just folklore; it was a highly effective, adaptive science that sustained both the people and the megafauna of the valley. Then came the rupture. With the imposition of colonial authority in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, this ancient covenant between the Chikunda and their land was violently dissolved.
Driven by the flawed Western ideology of "fortress conservation, " colonial powers declared the Zambezi's most fertile lands and richest wildlife zones as state property-National Parks and Game Reserves-and forcibly displaced the rightful inhabitants. The hunter, the fisher, and the gatherer were instantly transformed into the "native poacher, " a criminal in the eyes of the law. This book argues that the tragic poaching epidemic that ravaged the Zambezi in the post-colonial era was not a failure of the local people, but a direct, predictable outcome of this systemic exclusion.
Colonial policy did not save the wildlife; it destroyed the cultural and economic framework that protected it, replacing stewardship with resentment and poverty. The Chikunda Paradigm: From Exclusion to Shared Destiny seeks to move beyond assigning blame. It is a work of synthesis, combining historical narrative, anthropological analysis of traditional knowledge, and a critique of contemporary conservation policy across Mozambique, Zimbabwe, and Zambia.
More importantly, it is a vision for the future. We argue that the only durable solution to the ongoing human-wildlife crisis is a radical act of inclusion: the formal, legal, and economic restoration of resource management authority to the Chikunda people. This means integrating their Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) with modern science, empowering the mfumo (chiefs) and the mhondoro (spirit mediums) as essential governance partners, and ensuring that the economic value of wildlife is realized directly by the communities who bear the cost of living alongside it.
This is a blueprint for decolonizing conservation. It is a testament to the resilience of a people who refuse to be defined by historical trauma. Ultimately, the story of the Chikunda is a powerful, urgent message for the world: If we wish to save the great ecosystems of this planet, we must first recognize that social justice and ecological health are fundamentally indivisible. We invite you to join us in understanding this essential truth.