Harnessing the Biodiversity Economy in the Great Limpopo TFCA to Promote Inclusive Livelihoods, Poverty Reduction, and Gender Equality

Research Brief
4 November 2025

Herbert Ntuli, Edwin Muchapondwa, Boscow Okumu, Byela Tibesigwa, Moa Dahlberg, Julieth Tibanywana, Lydia Chikumbi, Kgomotso Montsi

Key Messages

The success of Transfrontier Conservation Areas (TFCAs) like the GLTFCA depends on addressing deep-rooted socio-economic and institutional challenges that drive communities toward unsustainable and illicit resource use. Low education levels, weak governance, limited livelihood options, and human-wildlife conflict continue to undermine conservation and development objectives, particularly for vulnerable and female-headed households.
 

Conservation and development must be pursued jointly. Strengthening rural education, expanding non-farm employment opportunities, and empowering local institutions are vital for reducing dependence on illegal extraction. Investments in community-based organizations, gender-responsive livelihood programs, and mechanisms to manage human-wildlife conflict can enhance both social equity and ecological sustainability.
 

A shift toward inclusive, livelihood-oriented, and gender-sensitive conservation policies is essential to transform TFCAs into engines of resilience, poverty reduction, and sustainable biodiversity management.

Files and links

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Publication reference
EfD Research Brief MS-1137
Publication | 4 November 2025