This book assembles a host of front-line insights on the role of
power and inequalities in shaping patterns of land use and resource
management. Most of the contributions are informed by the notion of
political ecology, recognizing that human relations to the
environment and human social relations are not separate phenomena
but inextricably intertwined.
The volume is unique is that it sets this approach in a
trans-disciplinary, global and historical framework; the
contributors represent a spectrum of academic disciplines including
anthropology, sociology, geography, economics, economic history,
historical archaeology, human ecology, development studies, and
sustainability science.
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