Browsing by Author "Bonephace, Mectrida"
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Item Legal reflection on spurring wildlife investments whilst embracing wild animals conservation in Tanzania(International Journal of Advanced Research, 2023) Bonephace, MectridaTanzania is diversifying wildlife investments. The Special Wildlife Investment Concession Area, (the SWICA) is set aside. The regulations to achieve the purpose are in place.The regulations enlighten on the procedures of carrying out investments within the SWICA. This paper reviewson this new investment scheme;whether itwill spare the ecosystem, specifically, the safety and survival of wild animals.The invited investments activities connote disturbance on the lives of wild animals. This paper observes that, the cumulative promulgation of the regulations threatens the life of wild animals. The apprehension of ecosystem disturbances in the SWICA is too wide to connote probable security on the lives of wild animals. Moreover, the avenues for some actors to excises “their wisdom,” aside of the regulations may invite unnecessary difficulties between the investors and the authority. Lastly, wild animals are likely to suffer a significant prejudice if investments in the SWICAs get through.Item Why should Tanzania engulf its natural wealth? a history worth attention and lessons learnt from economic hurdles(Journal of Policy and Leadership, 2019-06) Bonephace, MectridaThis is a review paper on recent progress in Tanzania‟s natural resources management hurdles towards their full utilization for economic development. The paper summarizes how borrowed legal framework has led astray economic flourishment in the natural resource sector in Tanzania. It shows tactful international web-pin Tanzania had entered into and from which the rescue would have been impossible if the Tanzania‟s President, Hon. John Joseph Pombe Magufuli (JPM) wouldn‟t have acted to end the overdue misery of the nation. Feeble legal framework in natural resources and investment laws thereon have fore-fronted in this paper as the underlying cause for failures to manage Tanzania‟s natural resources. In particular, Foreign Direct Investments (FDIs) is pointed to be one of the drivers through which Tanzania was trapped and exploited-a loop created by foreign adopted legal framework. The paper reckons on Tanzania‟s inability to out-way the tactics within which its natural resource and investment laws had tumbled. It commends enactment of new natural resource laws and explains hopes availed by the new laws.