Community connected land tenure for better livelihoods and conservation in northern Tanzania.

Community connected land tenure for better livelihoods and conservation in northern Tanzania.

Pastoralist, agro-pastoralist and hunter-gatherer communities have traditionally occupied the semiarid and arid areas of northern Tanzania, where they have managed the land sustainably, supporting both themselves and the wildlife that live there. Threats of land alienation and increasing resource degradation add to the insecurity of these natural resource dependent livelihood systems. In 2011, UCRT pioneered the communal certificate of Customary Right of Occupancy. Community land tenure provides local communities with the rights to own the communal land and resources which they live and depend on. Through supporting land rights and nature based livelihoods, and empowering these communities to sustainably manage the community land, huge areas of wildlife areas can be protected which otherwise would be susceptible to agriculture, encroachment and deforestation.