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Conservation Song - A History of Peasant - State Relations and the Environment in Malawi, 1860 - 2000 (Paperback)
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Conservation Song - A History of Peasant - State Relations and the Environment in Malawi, 1860 - 2000 (Paperback)
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Conservation Song explores ways in which colonial relations shaped
meanings and conflicts over environmental control and management in
Malawi. By focusing on soil conservation, which required an
integrated approach to the use and management of such natural
resources as land, water and forestry, it examines the origins and
effects of policies and their legacies in the post-colonial era.
That interrelationship has fundamental contemporary significance
and is not simply a phenomenon created in the colonial period. For
instance, like other countries in the region, post-colonial Malawi
has been bedevilled by increasing rates of environmental
degradation due, in part, to the expansion of human and animal
populations, cash crop production, drought and consequent
deforestation. These issues are as critical today as they were six
or seven decades ago. In fact, they are part of a conservation song
that has a long and complex history. The song of conservation was
initially composed and performed in the colonial period, modified
during the immediate postcolonial period and further refashioned in
the post-dictatorship period to suit the evolving political
climate; but the basic lyrics remain essentially the same. This
book attempts to explain the evolution of the conservationist idea
whilst demonstrating changes and continuities in peasant-state
relations under different political systems. The dominant narrative
posits conservation as a progressive movement aimed at
re-organising natural resources and protecting them from
destruction but the idea was contested and deeply embedded in
colonial power relations and scientific ethos. Conservation emerged
as an important tool of colonial state intervention and control
concerning people and scarce resources. Conservation Song shows how
the idea of conservation was rooted in and driven by a particular
type of science about the organisation of space and landscapes. It
offers a strategic entry point to understanding the historical
roots of Africa's social and ecological problems over time, which
are also intertwined with power and poverty relationships. In the
postcolonial period, the conservation tempo subsided and became
neglected in public discourse, only to re-emerge in the 1990s
through the democratisation movement
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