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E-grāmata: Saving Forests, Protecting People?: Environmental Conservation in Central America

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Pfeffer (development sociology, Cornell U.) and Schelhas (research forestry, USDA Forest Service, Tuskegee U., Alabama) look at the inherently conflicting dynamics between environmental conservation efforts and indigenous land use choices in Central America. Their research takes place in Costa Rica and Honduras and focuses on conservation as represented by the national parks, and land use as represented by the choices of small farmers, or campesinos. With a limited amount of land under their control, what choices do the farmers makes as to land use and why? The authors attempt to show the farmers' underlying environmental values, how those values are formed in the context of culture, and how those values change; and they examine the relation of perceived livelihood improvements to changing attitudes toward conservation. Annotation ©2008 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Recenzijas

What happens when global concerns about conserving forests and wildlife run up against the reality that people rely on those resources to make a living? Schelhas and Pfeffer examine how rural communities in Costa Rica and Honduras think about forests and conservationand they find that global discourses about the environment have reached the farthest corners of the earth, though local people reinterpret them to meet their needs. Saving Forests, Protecting People? brings these processes sharply into focus, which is essential if we are to find realistic solutions to the problems of conservation. -- David Kaimowitz, Ford Foundation Schelhas and Pfeffer have written an engaging and unique book that fills an important niche in our understanding of the intersection of global and local values in tropical forest conservation. -- Steven R. Brechin, Syracuse University The authors offer a realistic, penetrating analysis of the values and motivations that shape local response to government policies....Highly recommended. * CHOICE * Shines a welcome light on the changing attitudes of poor rural peoples toward newly created parks near their homes. It is a 'must read' for anyone concerned about preserving biodiversity in the tropics. -- Thomas K. Rudel, Rutgers University The book is divided into five chapters....This organization makes the book useful to a wide audience, including forest and protected area policy makers, the interested public, researchers, faculty and students alike. Additionally, because it contextualizes parks and protected areas both locally and globally, it would be an ideal analysis for use as an environment anthropology, or as a supplement in a forestry or other natural resource management and policy course. * Agric Hum Values *

List of Illustrations ix
Preface xiii
CHAPTER 1 Parks and Protected Areas in the Process of Environmental Globalization 1
CHAPTER 2 Protected Areas in Central America 25
CHAPTER 3 Diverse Cultural Models to Manage Competing Interests in Natural Resource Use in Costa Rica 53
CHAPTER 4 Forest Conservation, Park Management, and Value Change in Honduras 129
CHAPTER 5 Situating Environmental Values in a Globalizing World 203
References 235
APPENDIX A Data Collection and Processing 249
APPENDIX B Qualitative Interview Guide 253
APPENDIX C Costa Rica Questionnaire with Summary Data 259
APPENDIX D Honduras Questionnaire with Summary Data 279
APPENDIX E Sociodemographic Data for Qualitative Interviewees Quoted 297
List of Acronyms and Organizations 299
Index 301
About the Authors 309


John Schelhas is research forester with the Southern Research Station of the USDA Forest Service stationed at Tuskegee University in Alabama. Max J. Pfeffer is International Professor of Development Sociology and chair of the Department of Development Sociology at Cornell University.