Londolozi: Towards a Sustainable Business Model and Ecological Integrity in Southern Africa Harvard Case Solution & Analysis

Londolozi Game Reserve viewing in South Africa was a defining icon of eco-tourism in the 1990s and early 2000s - that is, tourism promotion of environmental management of land resources and, at the same time, the local economic development. Provision was in the region in the north-eastern part of the country, close to Mozambique, which is called progress in these two dimensions. Sand Sabi Game Reserve (within which was located Londolozi) was originally set up by the Government to provide hunters with an area in which to hunt wild animals. The government continued to reserve part of the Kruger National Park, which will allow visitors to view the wildlife, but the ban on hunting in order to increase the population of wild animals. KNP is initially separated from the Sabi Sands Game Reserve, to prevent hunters from moving into the reserve. Fence, but also prevented the traditional east-west migration of animals in the region. Through the 1980s and 1990s, the farms Sand Game Reserve Sabi converted their functions from hunting to wildlife, and the fence was demolished. New challenges for the economy when converting to wildlife became land and local economic development.
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by Ravi Abdelal, Thomas Koelble Source: Harvard Business School 20 pages. Publication Date: July 29, 2008. Prod. #: 709001-PDF-ENG

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