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Wildlife and War on the Mozambique-Zimbabwe Border
Colonial Fortress Conservation Since 1950
Wildlife and War on the Mozambique-Zimbabwe Border
Colonial Fortress Conservation Since 1950
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Description
Uncovers the hidden history of conservation, conflict, and resistance on the Mozambique-Zimbabwe border.
Drawing on rich oral testimonies and archival records, this book examines the impact of colonial wildlife conservation policies on African societies and borderlands. Through this exploration, the author shows how colonial “fortress conservation” policies-game reserves, hunting concessions, and land restrictions-disrupted rural life, fueled grievances, and shaped popular participation in the wars of liberation.
By comparing Portuguese and British approaches across a shared cultural and ecological region, this book challenges conventional colonial divides to reveal how conservation became entangled with nationalism, migration, and survival. Extending into the postcolonial era, it also highlights how projects like the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park carried forward legacies of exclusion under new guises.
Engaging and accessible, this book is essential reading for scholars, students, policymakers, and anyone interested in African history, environmental politics, or the complex ties between people, land, and wildlife.
Table of Contents
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Chicualacuala and Sengwe on the Eve of Colonial Game Preserves
2. Parks of Power: Conservation, Control, and The Colonial Encounter in Coutada 16 and Gonarezhou National Park
3. “Three Decades of War”: Games Reserves, Guerilla Wars, and Rural Participation
4. Living on the Edge: War, Displacement and Shangaan Resilience in the Borderlands
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index
Product details
| Published | Aug 06 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 288 |
| ISBN | 9798216268307 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 4 b&w illus, 5 b&w photos, and 1 table |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Combining oral histories and archival sources, Mtisi has authored a fresh new history that inserts Mozambique into, and undercuts Zimbabwean exceptionalism about, larger debates on wildlife conservation. This sophisticated history of colonial and national borderlands ranges broadly and deeply, interrogating Shangaan investments in borderland spaces and their meanings. Mtisi treats people's knowledge, memory, identity, and understandings as dynamic rather than static, and threads this history through a broad assessment of colonial rule and, crucially, southern Africa's liberation wars. As much a history of a people and a place as of conservation policy, Wildlife and War is a welcome addition to African environmental history.
Jeff Schauer, Associate Professor of History, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA

























