Justin Raycraft has produced a detailed and nuanced account of the complexities involved in the establishment and current conditions in the Randilen Wildlife Management Area in Northern Tanzania. Conservation in Common is extremely well written and avoids unnecessary jargon, appealing to experts and non-experts alike. -- J. Terrence McCabe * author of Cattle Bring Us to Our Enemies: Turkana Ecology, History and Raiding in a Disequilibrium System * In lucid prose, Justin Raycraft offers a fresh contribution to over fifty years of scholarship on East Africas Maasai pastoralists fraught encounters with modern wildlife conservation. He tackles the essential question underlying the history and future of this conflict: Do the goals of wildlife conservation necessitate the displacement of Maasai from their homelands? Raycrafts study provides a cautiously hopeful answer for those who think the protection of Indigenous rights and wildlife is not a zero-sum game. -- Roderick Neumann, PhD * professor, Florida International University * At a time when the world increasingly recognizes the centrality of community-led action in addressing the biodiversity and climate crises, Conservation in Common provides a fascinating portrait of what community conservation is all aboutfrom the political struggles over land use and wildlife revenues, to the local NGOs and community leaders that can make co-existence a reality. Raycraft's study moves an understanding of the relationship between local communities and conservation beyond polarized and often insular discourse to show how, with the right insights and approaches, the interests of agropastoralist communities in Tanzania and conservation can advance in tandem. -- Fred Nelson * CEO at Maliasili *