Conservation in this context cannot succeed without the communities who live alongside it. Where those communities have no viable economic alternative, the pressure on forests, rivers, and wildlife is relentless. Poaching, illegal charcoal production, and encroachment into protected areas are not simply failures of enforcement. They are symptoms of poverty and exclusion.
Long-term conservation success across the Basin depends on balancing ecological protection with economic resilience, local participation, and equitable development. Communities must see tangible benefits from conservation if they are to become its advocates. Local legitimacy is not a secondary consideration but a precondition for lasting impact.