In Kenya, Maasai private landowners come together to protect wildlife corridors


The Nashulai Maasai Conservancy in Kenya brings together private landowners who lease their plots to a collectively-managed conservancy for renewable 10-year terms. In exchange for payments, landowners agree not to fence their land or sell it to outsiders, creating a 2,400-hectare wildlife corridor to help safeguard the local environment. The conservancy also employs locals and runs an educational center that provides connections to other jobs and restoration efforts. Since its establishment in 2016, vegetation density has significantly increased, along with wildlife populations.

Related Stories