Abstract
Ecotourism is increasingly being promoted as an instrument that helps local socio-economic development and generate revenues to strengthen conservation of critically endangered biodiversity. It is often posited the magic bullet particularly across protected areas in the Global South. In theory, ecotourism can provide economic benefits to economically weaker communities living around protected areas and inspire them to protect the biodiversity in their own interest. This paper, however, provides empirical evidence that the so-called win–win is not an unqualified truism. With a case study on Sundarban Biosphere Reserve, world’s largest mangrove biodiversity and home of highly endangered Royal Bengal Tiger, this article examines complexities involved in ecotourism and urges the need to make it context-specific. It assesses ecotourism’s ability to provide livelihood alternatives to local communities and how can it help in conservation. The findings demonstrate an unequal, uneven, and skewed accumulation of benefits of ecotourism, often associated with market mechanisms of global environmental protection. As little as 36% of the interviewees claimed receiving direct or indirect benefits from ecotourism, the study finds. It failed to offer any benefits at all to the poorest and most marginal communities. On the contrary, it offered disproportionately larger returns to the remotely located capital invested in the local ecotourism facilities in the Sundarbans, thus defeating the principle behind the mechanism. In the area of conservation, tourism was blamed for increasing pollution and harming the health of the ecosystem by tourists who were considered ‘outsiders’ and insensitive to the ecology by the locals and conservation agencies alike.
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Notes
Interview with the Director of the Sundarban Biosphere Reserve (SBR) on Tuesday, July 31, 2012.
A conversion rate of US$ 1 = Rupees 54.05 (2012) was used.
See, for example, Indian court bans tourism in tiger reserve ‘core zones’ at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-18967906 (last accessed on 17 January 2016).
See, for example, “Supreme Court lifts ban on tourism in core areas of tiger reserves” at http://goo.gl/mek3jK (last accessed on 17 January 2016).
A mouza is the smallest administrative unit organized by the British in colonial India. The purpose was to collect revenues. Each mouza has a Jurisdiction List (J. L.) number by which it can be identified. There could be one or more than one village in a mouza. The Census of India provides village level data and for them, a mouza is equivalent to a village.
See “Guidelines for Ecotourism in and around Protected Areas” at http://www.moef.nic.in/downloads/public-information/Draft%20Ecotourism%20Guidelines%202%20June.pdf (last accessed on 17 January 2016).
Also see “Tourism facilities near wildlife habitats to pay 10% of revenue soon” at http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/environment/flora-fauna/Tourism-facilities-near-wildlife-habitats-to-pay-10-of-revenue-soon/articleshow/14858774.cms?
These nineteen hotels are: Chital, Zilla Parishad Guest House, Aram, Apanjan, Avinandan, Banani, Krishnakunja, Mainak, Madhuban, Barman Villa, Hanshoraj Resort, Mangrove, Sundari, Hemanta Lodge, Swastik, Shri Ma, Pramila, Mouchak, and Tiger Land. Among these 19 hotels, only the Zilla Parishad Guet House is owned by the state government.
The idea of local ownership could be relative. An owner who lives in the Gosaba Block can be considered a local, and in contrast, an owner who lives outside the Gosaba Block can be regarded as an outsider. Here, I consider lodge owners as “local” who live in the Sundarban region, in the nineteen community development blocks of South and North 24 Parganas.
See “NGT orders ban on noise, solid waste pollution in Sundarbans” http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/environment/pollution/NGT-orders-ban-on-noise-solid-waste-pollution-in-Sundarbans/articleshow/55616060.cms (last accessed on July 6 2017).
According to 2011 census of India, Pakhiralaya’s total population is 3946.
We consider direct economic benefits include earnings from full time and part time jobs at the hotels, earnings as a boat driver, tour guide, and as a local tour operator. Earnings from selling grocery, occassional home stays, vegetables, tea, and snacks, pulling vans, performing a popular folk tale Banabibi Pala, and daily wage labor as a cook or construction work are considered indirect economic benefits.
Gosaba Bazaar is the primary market in the Gosaba mouza. It is one of the busiest area in the village. In order to reach Pakhiralaya, one may need to visit Gosaba Bazaar first and then hire a van from there.
Bigha is a unit generally used to measure land area in South Asia. In West Bengal, 1bigha is equivalent to one-third of an acre or 0.3306 acre.
Para is a Bengali word which could be interpreted as a neighbourhood or a locality. The word Dakshin means south. So, Dakshin Para means a neighbourhood located in the south.
Until September 2012, there were 30 shops (including grocery, tea stalls, handicrafts, and a saloon) along the paved road of Pakhiralaya.
See, “For tourism, African Safari to be replicated in Sundarbans: Mamata” http://archive.indianexpress.com/news/for-tourism-african-safari-to-be-replicated-in-sunderbans-mamata/906476/ (last accessed on July 3 2017).
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Acknowledgements
We thank local communities of Gosaba for providing valuable information and time during the fieldwork. We also thank Dr. Tad Mutersbaugh and Dr. P. P. Karan at the University of Kentucky for their thoughtful comments on a very early draft of the paper which provided it a defined direction. We sincerely thank Dr. Jonathan Phillips and Lynn Phillips at the University of Kentucky for reviewing the final version of the article. We thank Ryan Cooper and Raghava Davuluri for lending their hand in map-making of the Sundarbans. The research was financially supported by the National Science Foundation, US (DDRI No. 1029993), and Association of American Geographers (AAG) Dissertation Research Grant 2012.
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Ghosh, P., Ghosh, A. Is ecotourism a panacea? Political ecology perspectives from the Sundarban Biosphere Reserve, India. GeoJournal 84, 345–366 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10708-018-9862-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10708-018-9862-7