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Property and Politics in Sabah, Malaysia - Native Struggles Over Land Rights (Paperback)
Loot Price: R768
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Property and Politics in Sabah, Malaysia - Native Struggles Over Land Rights (Paperback)
Series: Culture, Place, and Nature
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In 1990, shortly after a Malaysian politician announced that the
boundaries of Kinabalu Park, a primary tourist destination, were to
be expanded to include the species-rich tropical forest known
locally as Bukit Hempuen, most of the area was burned to the
ground, allegedly by local people. What would motivate the people
who had for generations hunted and gathered forest products there
to act so destructively? In this volume, Amity Doolittle
illuminates this and other contemporary land-use issues by
examining how resources were used historically in Sabah from 1881
to 1996 and what customary rights of access to land and resources
were enjoyed by local people. Drawing upon anthropology, political
science, environmental history, and political ecology, she looks at
how control over and access to resources have been defined,
negotiated, and contested by colonial state agents, the
postcolonial Malaysian state, and local people. The study is
grounded in methodological and theoretical advances in the field of
political ecology, merging the traditions of human ecology and
political economy and looking at environmental conflicts in terms
of the particulars of place, culture, and history. Doolittle
assumes that environmental problems have causes that are complex
and changing and that solutions must be specific to time and place.
Using a political ecology perspective allows her to focus on the
root causes of environmental degradation, exposing the underlying
political, economic, and social forces at work. The challenge in
the twenty-first century, she writes, is to move beyond blaming
local people for resource degradation and to find ways to achieve
equitable access to natural resources and more sustainable land use
practices. Property and Politics in Sabah, Malaysia has great
relevance to development studies, political ecology, environmental
planning, anthropology, and legal studies in natural resource
management.
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