COULD SACREDNESS CONTRIBUTE TO FOREST CONSERVATION IN AFRICAN URBAN AREAS ?
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Abstract
Attention is presently paid to forest conservation because of its potential for the sequestration of
carbon. More than rural forest, urban forest is of greater utility because of it can serve as a natural
low cost laboratory for pedagogic activities of several schools. Unfortunately those forests are
regressing in Benin. The objective of this study is to analyze whether sacredness could help reverse
this situation in State forest reserve. It focused on two urban forests : the State forest reserve of
Abomey (Abomey District) in the centre of Benin, and the State forest reserve of Kilir (Djougou
District) in the northern Benin. The information was collected through a literature review on the
administrative status of these forests, a mapping and enumeration of forest species, participant
observation of the pressure on the forests, traditional authority interview and focus groups analysis
with stakeholders of both forests. The investigation revealed that the size of the two forest
decreased drastically, while each of the remaining parts sheltered a sacred space. From respectively
a size of 173 ha in 1941 and a size of 50 ha in 1949, 43.4 % of the Abomey forest and 70 % of the
Kilir forest are occupied illegally. Sacred spaces were completely preserved through time,
suggesting that a sufficient recovery of sacred powers could facilitate the sustainable management
of urban State forest reserve.
