Traditional Representations of the Natural Environment and Biodiversity Conservation: Sacred Groves in Ghana

29 Pages Posted: 25 Aug 2010

See all articles by Paul Sarfo-Mensah

Paul Sarfo-Mensah

Kwame Nkrumah University of Science - Bureau of Integrated Rural Development and Technology

William Oduro

Wildlife and Range Management, Faculty of Renewable Natural Resources, CANR, KNUST, Kumasi, Ghana

Ernestina Antoh Fredua

Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology

Stephen Amisah

Wildlife and Range Management, Faculty of Renewable Natural Resources, CANR, KNUST

Date Written: August 25, 2010

Abstract

Local cosmologies and traditional perceptions of the natural environment, especially forests, have been a major influence in the management of the natural resources and biodiversity amongst rural communities in the transitional zone of Ghana. Sacred groves, which are typical outputs of traditional conservation practices, derive from indigenous religious beliefs and perceptions of forest. Sacred groves are believed to be the abode of local gods, ancestral spirits and other super natural beings. These beliefs and perceptions have in the past strongly supported the conservation of biodiversity. However, changes in local cosmologies threaten the protection of rare species, habitats and ecological processes. Data from the study confirm evidence from several studies in Ghana and elsewhere in West Africa that the tremendous ecological, social, institutional, religious and economic changes in communities that have protected sacred groves threaten the survival of these cultural artefacts. The paper demonstrates that in contemporary natural resources management, the sacred grove model may still be used as a means of restoring and protecting landscapes in indigenous communities. Even in communities where population explosion and economic pressures have reached thresholds that undermine the natural landscape, the model may still be useful to keep pockets of forests within the landscape.

Keywords: Sacred Grove, Cultural Artefact, Communal Resource, Degradation, Sustainability and Biodiversity

JEL Classification: Q5

Suggested Citation

Sarfo-Mensah, Paul and Oduro, William and Antoh Fredua, Ernestina and Amisah, Stephen, Traditional Representations of the Natural Environment and Biodiversity Conservation: Sacred Groves in Ghana (August 25, 2010). FEEM Working Paper No. 87.2010, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1665065 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1665065

Paul Sarfo-Mensah (Contact Author)

Kwame Nkrumah University of Science - Bureau of Integrated Rural Development and Technology ( email )

Faculty of Law
Faculty of Law
Kumasi, AK +233
Ghana
00 233 51 60406 (Phone)
00 233 51 60137 (Fax)

William Oduro

Wildlife and Range Management, Faculty of Renewable Natural Resources, CANR, KNUST, Kumasi, Ghana ( email )

Faculty of Law
Faculty of Law
Kumasi, AK Ashanti Region +233
Ghana

Ernestina Antoh Fredua

Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology ( email )

Faculty of Law
Faculty of Law
Kumasi, AK Ashanti Region +233
Ghana

Stephen Amisah

Wildlife and Range Management, Faculty of Renewable Natural Resources, CANR, KNUST ( email )

Faculty of Law
Faculty of Law
Kumasi, AK Ashanti Region +233
Ghana

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