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The Tropical Rain Forest - A Political Ecology of Hegemonic Myth-Making (Paperback, UK ed.)
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The Tropical Rain Forest - A Political Ecology of Hegemonic Myth-Making (Paperback, UK ed.)
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List price R288
Loot Price R271
Discovery Miles 2 710
You Save R17 (6%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Our attachment to the tropical rain forest has grown over the past
hundred years from a minority colonial pursuit to mainstream
environmental obsession. The tropical rain forest has variously
been assumed to be the world's most important repository of
biological diversity and 'the lungs of the planet'. As Philip Stott
shows in this magnificent monograph, neither claim has any basis in
fact. The Northern environmentalist conception of the tropical rain
forest is far removed from the ecological realities of the places
it purports to denote. Most of the 'million year old forest' to
which environmentalists sentimentally refer turns out to have
existed for less than 20,000 years. During the last ice age the
tropics were colder and drier than today and probably more closely
resembled the savanna grasslands of East Africa. Most of the
abundant plants and insects of the so-called tropical rain forest
are equally novel, having co-evolved with the trees. Claims
regarding the fragility of the ecosystems in tropical areas are
similarly awry. Recent research suggests that a clear-cut area will
return to forest with a similar level of biological diversity to
the original within twenty years. Ironically, the mythical 'climax
rain forest' would be a barren place: no new species would evolve
because there would be no new environmental niches to be filled.
The myth of the tropical rain forest suits the purposes of Northern
environmentalists, who are able to justify demands for restrictions
on the conversion of 'virgin forest' to other uses. Yet the history
of the world has been one of evolutionary change. If we attempt to
maintain stasis, we risk limiting our ability to adapt to change
when it inevitably comes. Calls for the tropical rain forest to be
preserved are founded on the implied presumption that the people
living in tropical regions are merely there to protect a western
construct. This denigrates their rights and dehumanises them. If
people in developing countries are to escape from the mire of
poverty in which so many continue to live, it is essential that
they have secure rights of tenure and are free to do with their
land what they will. Some may make mistakes, some may fail in their
attempts to manage the land, but many will be successful and those
successes will be emulated. Through a process of experimentation --
trial, error and emulation -- people will come to learn how best to
manage the land. The environment will then be managed in ways that
are best for humanity as a whole, not according to the whims of a
minority of eco-imperialists. Giving rights to people, not to the
environment, is not only best for the people, but is also best for
the environment. Philip Stott, Professor of Biogeography at the
School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London,
provides an eloquent deconstruction of the ideas that have led to
the mythical western idea of the tropical rain forest, which has
constrained our ability to understand the environments of
developing countries and has enabled the eco-imperialist vision to
flourish.
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