Decolonising Fire Science by Reexamining Fire Management across Contested Landscapes: A Workshop Approach
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Decolonising Fire Science Workshop Series
“Ethical concerns should have the same primacy as research questions” [28].
3. Case Report: Fire across Contested Landscapes, Kenya
“Let the field speak to you”(Invited Researcher)
3.1. Fire Management in Kenya’s Conservation Areas
3.2. Workshop Scope and Objectives
3.3. Kenya Workshop Activities
3.3.1. Rich Pictures
“When there is a fire, vegetation is burned, meaning there is less food for wildlife and livestock. […] At the same time, when there is fire, it produces ash which is a fertiliser. It makes fresh grass grow very fast, which is very beneficial to wildlife and livestock. […] Fires are ecosystem architects; they build forested ecosystems”.
“…fire breaks the dormancy of the seeds. Sometimes […] you have seeds that remain there for 20–30 years. […] Where charcoal has burned and there is good rain”, “you find that seedlings grow faster than in other areas, […] and there will be a lot of tree growth”.
“We have campfires, where people sit around the fire. It’s an ancient tradition. Fire gave us an evolutionary edge; it gave us power over the planet. There are so many hazards and risks with fire, but we were the only ones that harnessed the energy of fire. An equally important thing that fire did was that it forced human bond and interaction. It was around campfires like this, on a starry night. We sat around and our ancestors’ shared stories and our children played. For me, it is that positive human fire interaction”.
“Most people use fire as a form of social conflict, […] often between the people living around the protected area and the park authorities. […] A ranger could draw a gun and arrest a community member and they retaliate using fire”.
“Charcoal burners go and burn charcoal in the forests and leave the fires burning, often at night”, and “men climb trees with fire when they look for honey, using smoke from the fire to smoke out the bees and collect honey, leaving the fire in the tree, burning”. As a result, they expressed how “the trees are burning, and animals and people are running”.
“Projects might fund tree replantation in certain areas. The seeds are replanted and there is a cost for the seedlings and the labour. Then the fire burns all the seedlings and trees already existing in the area. So, money is lost. Trees are lost. And small seedlings that are replanted to improve the degraded area are also burnt”.
“We get fires where wood is used in industries, but there is also the economic benefit of these industries in terms of manufacturing. So, there is that critical borderline between destruction and economic benefits. The benefits are accrued through production, […] so there is that component of increasing production and using fire, and not destroying the forests where everything is being harvested”.
“Fire can also be a solution to a problem. When people are fighting for grass, you just burn it, and everyone lives in peace. Burning the common resource stops people fighting over it.” “People argue about fire because of how different groups perceive it—positive and negative. Grass is a common resource.” “Burning the resource being fought over can result in further conflict. People and their livestock rely on this grass. Where will they find grass to graze on? That is a huge economic loss”.
“You need communities on side. This […] mentality is dangerous—when you position a person’s rights aligned with an elephant. When I look at fire governance, I am looking at it from a conservation aspect. Those who are more trained think like the west, and they have authority. There is no local community knowledge in societies […] because it’s going in a non-indigenous direction. [...] Fire is a problem to the locals too. Including locals is a solution. The other problem is that the fires lit out of conflict are not intended for wildlife, but they affect them. We need to look for solutions. A transferable model. You solve it here; it needs to be transferred elsewhere”.
3.3.2. World Café Discussion
“We have committed many resources into fighting fires across the landscape. But the biggest challenge we have is identifying how the fires started and who is doing this. We need to work more on this intelligence aspect so we can identify exactly who is doing what. […] Other areas we have exhausted—we have firebreaks, we have guys working. But when a fire spreads from a neighboring farm into the park, we don’t know who started it. Or when a poacher goes into the park and starts a fire”.
“Every sector has a law. The Forest Act, the Grasslands Act, the Wildlife Conservation Act…, each imposing penalties for people burning vegetation. […] But there is no permission for fire use in the law for the time being. We have it in our plans, in our technical reports. Burning is there, like early burning, but it is not practiced”.
“The biggest challenge in fire governance is that the country lacks a legal framework in terms of fire management. What exists is just sectoral policies within small sectors. For example, fire management plans within institutions. It’s based on occupational safety and doesn’t extend to fire management within landscapes. […] If a legal framework were to be established, there would also be that aspect of funding fire management action and exploring how other fire challenges can be addressed. Currently, they lack support. This is the challenge”.
“Existing laws are somehow conflicting with regards to the community. The Wildlife Act prohibits entry into the park, whether you are grazing livestock, collecting firewood… but the people here in Tsavo tell you that the Maasai are allowed to graze their cows inside the Maasai Mara National Reserve, but we don’t allow the same rights for people here to graze inside Tsavo parks […] There is a need to align these policies so that they are not selective, assisting in avoiding confrontation that arises when people feel that the government favours some people over others”.
“We need a national strategy for managing fires across all the landscapes because I am finding a situation whereby if you allow access into some of the protected areas without control—just allowing people to enter because they wish to utilise or get something out of it, it will degrade that landscape and it might not ever recover. […] There is also a lot of activism activity directed towards us. So, […] I think we have got to be very careful in defining dos and don’ts. If it’s a national forest or a national park, they must be kept like that. We cannot let people get in there and start manipulating the resource. […] We should focus on increasing these natural resources on community land, rather than relying on the protected areas”.
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- “Lack of awareness over the positive role of fires […] or the benefits of using fire. This is a barrier”. Historically, negative attitudes were reinforced by state and non-state agents [106]. However, a “loss of traditional ways of life” and “the erosion of traditional knowledge” have created a “general sentiment among communities that fire is negative and destructive”, especially when they “do not see the benefits of the protected areas”, “lack power or incentive to maintain the land when it is lost to the government for development projects”, and “do not receive compensation when things burn” [4].
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- Intergroup conflict where “access to resources is denied”, “local people and their practices are suppressed”, and “the community is not involved in the protected area”. “Tensions are increasing between the KWS, KFS, and ranches” where the production, provisioning, and benefits of natural resources are redirected to the state rather than local people. As a result, “fire is used as a social act of resistance by local communities within protected area landscapes”. For example, “when you have cows, but you don’t have access to the protected area, you don’t feel like you are part of that protected area. Even when there is fire, you don’t care. […] This aspect of denying access to natural resources is changing local attitudes”.
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- Limited livelihood opportunities among subsistence-oriented communities under climate change and population growth. “You find that people are looking to fulfil their livelihoods” and “burn if pasture, fodder, grass, is overgrown in the protected area. […] When grass is overgrown, it’s not palatable”. Local communities are burning “for economic reasons”, such “burning charcoal to get an income, […] honey harvesting, […] and collecting wood”. “In Kenya, there is a poverty situation. A lot of people don’t have work [..] and the means to put food on the table, so they end up engaging in activities that result in fires—mostly by accident, but sometimes intentional”. Since they pay taxes, many communities “feel that the government should provide them with food and some access to protected areas”.
“Research shows that if you increase the resource benefits to local communities, they are more likely to appreciate the park. […] This can be a way of managing fire”.
“You get local communities around protected areas that are aggrieved because they are not benefiting from that area, just like in our place. There was a time we had multiple issues because the surrounding community were not getting employed […], so they just started burning the farm. […] They have animals to look after, and because the area is fenced, they could not access pasture to graze their animals. This started to create problems. We had to start getting them involved and employed, and when we started including them and educating them, they started to act as our neighbours because they were benefiting from the farm. We still get accidental fires in this area, but this has reduced”.
“This demonstrates the erasure of traditional cultures and diversity”. “If the government were to exert authority over fire use and ignore local forms of institutional legitimacy and empowerment, local grievances would only increase” [39].
“The best way to deal with conflict is to bring the community along, laying the foundation. […] If you negotiate a management plan or policy and it is agreed on, this can serve as the basis for equal distribution of resource benefits”.
“The best way to manage fires and understand their impact on species is to incorporate local and traditional knowledge. But since communities are losing their traditional way of life, we need to find a certain meeting point. For instance, we can look at traditional institutions and their ways of predicting change, and the transmission of knowledge between groups should be respected. Fire centres should not be isolated between protected areas and communities, they should be central to both. […] We need legal change where communities benefit from the policy. In terms of benefits, now we only look at economic resources and monetary values like water, but we also need that element of social and cultural benefits. Maybe that way, attitudes will change. Maybe we need more projects like REDD+ in Kenya”.
3.3.3. Participatory Art
4. London Workshop Activities
5. Reflections and Next Steps
“The shared elements and opportunities for exchange reinforced how we are all implicated in decolonising research, fire management, and international development. At the same time, having separate spaces to consider how we specifically are implicated reinforced that our responsibilities are different, and allowed us to think about concrete steps to take forwards in our contexts”.
5.1. Limitations
“There is a danger that readers from an alternative epistemological position will judge the paper in terms of knowledge claims relevant only to their own epistemological position” [127].
5.2. A Road Map to an Equitable Fire Future
“The joint declaration on wildfire management in Kenya shows the commitments of the stakeholders and rightsholders in actively participating in fire management policy development, managing fires willingly as well as through collaborative research to help build policies that respect indigenous peoples’ ideologies, enhance equal rights, and most of all adopt scientifically informed decisions in their respective landscapes”.
“The methodologies applied during this workshop were effective in bringing to light the nuances in landscape-related challenges. […] The discussions remained constructive and organised, with no disagreements or heated conversations disrupting the flow of information. […] This workshop provided me with a new perspective on environmental sustainability. Being exposed to the essence of community engagement in wildfire management across contested areas […] is an asset, especially in realising the importance of collaboration between communities and government sectors for the betterment of our ecosystems”.
“This event serves as a testament to the importance of collaborative efforts in fostering sustainable solutions for our landscapes”.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- Their intention to support the development of an integrated wildfire management policy, which would include:
- ⚬
- supporting the establishment of locally based fire management committees;
- ⚬
- accelerating research into traditional institutions and knowledges on fire management;
- ⚬
- carrying out community meetings in specific contested landscapes;
- And their desire to create a shared space and to continue to work together towards achieving the above intents.
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Croker, A.R.; Ford, A.E.S.; Kountouris, Y.; Mistry, J.; Muthiuru, A.C.; Smith, C.; Praise, E.; Chiawo, D.; Muniu, V. Decolonising Fire Science by Reexamining Fire Management across Contested Landscapes: A Workshop Approach. Fire 2024, 7, 94. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7030094
Croker AR, Ford AES, Kountouris Y, Mistry J, Muthiuru AC, Smith C, Praise E, Chiawo D, Muniu V. Decolonising Fire Science by Reexamining Fire Management across Contested Landscapes: A Workshop Approach. Fire. 2024; 7(3):94. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7030094
Chicago/Turabian StyleCroker, Abigail Rose, Adriana E. S. Ford, Yiannis Kountouris, Jayalaxshmi Mistry, Amos Chege Muthiuru, Cathy Smith, Elijah Praise, David Chiawo, and Veronica Muniu. 2024. "Decolonising Fire Science by Reexamining Fire Management across Contested Landscapes: A Workshop Approach" Fire 7, no. 3: 94. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7030094
APA StyleCroker, A. R., Ford, A. E. S., Kountouris, Y., Mistry, J., Muthiuru, A. C., Smith, C., Praise, E., Chiawo, D., & Muniu, V. (2024). Decolonising Fire Science by Reexamining Fire Management across Contested Landscapes: A Workshop Approach. Fire, 7(3), 94. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7030094