Personally I am a proponent of some forms of fortress-style conservation. I believe there are species that just don't mix well with humans, and conserving them will necessitate setting aside tracts of land where most human activities such as agriculture are minimized. Doing this without resorting to military-like strategies however requires a conservation infrastructure that is most often absent or toothless because of the lack of political will - even if the richest countries. This is what makes me pessimistic about the conservation of a good portion of the world's remaining megafauna outside of small plots set aside for tourism. In that sense, the future for elephants, rhinos and tigers seems to lay perhaps entirely in managed settings, which is a truly sad thought.
Thank you for sharing
@Mr. Zootycoon, thats an interesting view and you make some very pertinent points.
From what I've seen and read I am not really a proponent of fortress-style conservation per se, although I do think that there are situations where it could and should be used provisionally on a case by case basis.
Here in Brazil in the Amazon for example I strongly believe that the situation at the moment with land grabs and invasion by squatters and loggers of indigenous reserves (leading to mass killing of indigenous peoples who are the only communities who should be inhabiting these areas) and deforestation and burning of forest should be dealt with by a strong millitary response and a shoot to kill policy.
I think the situation I mentioned above is the strongest example I can think of for the need for a millitarized response to conservation but I'm sure there are others around the world.
When it comes to Sub-Saharan Africa and particularly East-Africa it is a really complicated situation because many of the protected areas established since the 1950's where fortress-style conservation have actually always had a human presence and been modified by traditional nomadic pastoralism to some extent.
I am disgusted by the news coming out of Equatorial Africa about WWF's abuse, torture and killings of indigenous Baka peoples by this organization's Bantu forest guard thugs and I can't for the life of me understand why they did not employ the Baka in this role as they are the real stewards of the forest and the stakeholders with the know-how to conserve this ecosystem.
The problem is that when traditional and indigenous communities are excluded from these lands that they have always occupied it is a situation that can lead to working in the favour of poaching activities and just complicate things even further (and the cynical part of me thinks that this escalation also financially benefits a militarization of conservation complex).
There is a great BBC documentary on this topic which I'll post below: