Navigating constricted channels: local cooption, coercion, and concentration under co-management, Mweru-Luapula fishery, Zambia
In theory, natural resource governance through co-management promises a rich array of benefits for local populations, from representative decision-making to legitimately equal and open access to natural resources.Anthropologists, social geographers and other practitioners of political ecology will not be surprised to learn that such theory rarely b