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Stealing Shining Rivers - Agrarian Conflict, Market Logic, and Conservation in a Mexican Forest (Paperback)
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Stealing Shining Rivers - Agrarian Conflict, Market Logic, and Conservation in a Mexican Forest (Paperback)
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What happens to indigenous people when their homelands are declared
by well-intentioned outsiders to be precious environmental
habitats? In this revelatory book, Molly Doane describes how a rain
forest in Mexico's southern state of Oaxaca was appropriated and
redefined by environmentalists who initially wanted to conserve its
biodiversity. Her case study approach shows that good intentions
are not always enough to produce results that benefit both a
habitat and its many different types of inhabitants. Doane begins
by showing how Chimalapas - translated as "shining rivers" - has
been "produced" in various ways over time, from a worthless
wasteland to a priceless asset. Focusing on a series of
environmental projects that operated between 1990 and 2008, she
reveals that environmentalists attempted to recast agrarian
disputes - which actually stemmed from government-supported
corporate incursions into community lands and from unequal land
redistribution - as environmental problems. Doane focuses in
particular on the attempt throughout the 1990s to establish a
"Campesino Ecological Reserve" in Chimalapas. Supported by major
grants from the World Wildlife Foundation (WWF), this effort to
foster and merge agrarian and environmental interests was
ultimately unsuccessful because it was seen as politically
threatening by the state. By 2000, the Mexican government had
convinced the WWF to redirect its conservation monies to the state
government and its agencies. The WWF eventually abandoned attempts
to establish an "enclosure" nature reserve in the region or to gain
community acceptance for conservation. Instead, working from a new
market-based model of conservation, the WWF began paying cash to
individuals for "environmental services" such as reforestation and
environmental monitoring.
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