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Sustainability at Crossroads: The Interplay of Ethnic Diversity, Livelihoods, and Natural Resource Management in Enclave Villages of Lake Malawi National Park

Author

Listed:
  • Yasuko Kusakari

    (Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, The University of Tokyo, 5-1-5 Kashiwanoha, Kashiwa 277-8583, Chiba, Japan)

  • Placid Mpeketula

    (Department of Biological and Biomedical Health Sciences, University of Malawi, Zomba P.O. Box 280, Malawi)

  • James Banda

    (Monkey Bay Capture Fisheries Research Centre, Monkey Bay P.O. Box 27, Malawi)

  • Talandila Kasapila

    (Lake Malawi National Park, Monkey Bay P.O. Box 48, Malawi)

  • John Matewere

    (Sustainable Cape Maclear, Monkey Bay P.O. Box 110, Malawi)

  • Tetsu Sato

    (SDGs Promotion Office, Ehime University, 3 Bunkyo-cho, Matsuyama 790-8577, Ehime, Japan)

Abstract

The enclave villages of Lake Malawi National Park (LMNP) are human settlements within a World Natural Heritage landscape. While social heterogeneity has been widely discussed in social–ecological systems (SES) scholarship, ethnic diversity has often remained analytically implicit. This study makes ethnic diversity central to analysis by examining how it shapes livelihoods, resource use, and governance across enclave villages. Drawing on an integrated household survey, key informant interviews, and extended field observations, and informed by collaboration theory, the SES framework, and scholarship on social differentiation, the analysis shows that ethnic diversity facilitates exchanges of fishing techniques, farming skills, ecological knowledge, and market linkages, producing plural and seasonally adaptive livelihood portfolios. Households routinely combine fishing, agriculture, tourism, petty trade, and forest use, contributing to diversified resource use. However, pressures on fish stocks, forest resources, and agricultural land highlight the need for more inclusive co-management. Emerging community-based institutions and collaborative initiatives increasingly facilitate coordination, rule-making, and shared stewardship. Overall, the findings identify practical and conceptual entry points through which ethnic diversity, ecological knowledge, and adaptive livelihoods can jointly support more resilient and inclusive pathways for sustainability at the crossroads of resource-dependent livelihoods and conservation, offering insights for socially diverse human–nature landscapes.

Suggested Citation

  • Yasuko Kusakari & Placid Mpeketula & James Banda & Talandila Kasapila & John Matewere & Tetsu Sato, 2026. "Sustainability at Crossroads: The Interplay of Ethnic Diversity, Livelihoods, and Natural Resource Management in Enclave Villages of Lake Malawi National Park," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(5), pages 1-39, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:5:p:2405-:d:1876066
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