The second edition of this remarkable volume updates the immense advances in policy and soft international law with regards to the rights of mobile indigenous peoples in conservation.
The contributors to this book examine the interface between conservation and indigenous communities who are forced to move or settle elsewhere to accommodate environmental policies and biodiversity concerns. The case studies investigate successful and not so successful community-managed projects in Africa, the Middle East, South and SouthEastern Asia, Australia and Latin America.
Recenzijas
Reviews of the 1st Edition:
Presents an admirable set of case studies on the effects of modern conservation projects on local peoples from across the globe. The great strength of the volume lies in the diversity of cases. International Journal of African Historical Studies
this book will be the source material for future generations of researchers The many arguments in this book will challenge and hopefully bring forward vigorous debate about the aims and goals of sustainable development and conservation tools. The Indigenous Nations Studies Journal
I have nothing but praise for this book and its worth. It is written in a flawless and effortless manner. I loved the tone and how it packs in so much factorial information without the reader knowing it, but at the same time explores in-depth intimate life decisions and care giving practices that we have never seen so closely and so vividly presented. James J. McKenna, University of Notre Dame
List of Tables and Figures
Preface
Acknowledgements
Notes on Contributors
Foreword
Chapter
1. Introduction: Conservation and Mobile Indigenous Peoples
Dawn Chatty and Marcus Colchester
Chapter
2. Negotiating the Tropical Forest: Colonizing Farmers and Lumber
Resources in the Ticoporo Reserve
Miguel Montoya
Chapter
3. Compatibility of Pastoralism and Conservation? A Test Case using
Integrated Assessment in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, Tanzania
Kathleen A. Galvin, Jim Ellis, Randall B. Boone, Ann L. Magennis, Nicole M.
Smith, Stacy J. Lynn, Philip Thornton
Chapter
4. Giving Conservation a Human Face? Lessons from Forty Years of
Combining Conservation and Development in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area,
Tanzania
J. Terrence McCabe
Chapter
5. National Parks and Human Ecosystems: The Challenge to Community
Conservation. A Case Study from Simanjiro, Tanzania
Jim Igoe
Chapter
6. The Mursi and the Elephant Question
David Turton
Chapter
7. Forced Resettlement, Rural Livelihoods and Wildlife Conservation
along the Ugalla River in Tanzania
Eleanor Fisher
Chapter
8. The Influence of Forced Removals and Land Restitution on
Conservation in South Africa
Christo Fabricius and Chris de Wet
Chapter
9. How Sustainable is the Communalizing Discourse of New
Conservation? The Masking of Difference, Inequality and Aspiration in the
Fledgling Conservancies of Namibia
Sian Sullivan
Chapter
10. Representing the Resettled: The Ethical Issues Raised by
Research and Representation of the San
Sue Armstrong and Olivia Bennett
Chapter
11. Negev Bedouin: Displacement, Forced Settlement and Conservation
Aref Abu-Rabia
Chapter
12. Customs Excised: Arid Land Conservation in Syria
Jonathan Rae, George Arab and Tom Nordblom
Chapter
13. Animal Reintroduction Projects in the Middle East: Conservation
without a Human Face
Dawn Chatty
Chapter
14. Environmental Conservation and Indigenous Culture in a Greek
Island Community: The Dispute over the Sea Turtles
Dimitrios Theodossopoulos
Chapter
15. Displacement and Forced Settlement: Gypsies in Tamilnadu
Daniel Meshack and Chris Griffin
Chapter
16. Karen and the Land in Between: Public and Private Enclosure of
Forests in Thailand
Jin Sato
Chapter
17. Lost Worlds and Local People: Protected Areas Development in
Viet Nam
Pamela McElwee
Chapter
18. The History of Displacement and Forced Settlement in West
Kalimantan, Indonesia: Implications for Co-managing Danau Sentarum Wildlife
Reserve
Reed L. Wadley
Chapter
19. Planning for Community-based Management of Conservation Areas:
Indigenous Forest Management and Conservation of Biodiversity in the Kayan
Mentarang National Park, East Kalimantan, Indonesia
Cristina Eghenter
Chapter
20. Resettlement and Natural Resources in Halmahera, Indonesia
Christopher R. Duncan
Chapter
21. Welcome to Aboriginal Land: Anangu Ownership and Management of
Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park
Graham Griffin
Index of Subjects
Index of Names
Dawn Chatty is a former director of the Refugee Studies Centre at the University of Oxford and Fellow of the British Academy.