|
Product Description
A significant contribution to political ecology, Conservation Is Our Government Now is an ethnographic examination of the history and social effects of conservation and development efforts in Papua New Guinea. Drawing on extensive fieldwork conducted over a period of seven years, Paige West focuses on the Crater Mountain Wildlife Management Area, the site of a biodiversity conservation project implemented between 1994 and 1999. She describes the interactions between those who ran the program—mostly ngo workers—and the Gimi people who live in the forests surrounding Crater Mountain. West shows that throughout the project there was a profound disconnect between the goals of the two groups. The ngo workers thought that they would encourage conservation and cultivate development by teaching Gimi to value biodiversity as an economic resource. The villagers expected that in exchange for the land, labor, food, and friendship they offered the conservation workers, they would receive benefits, such as medicine and technology. In the end, the divergent nature of each group’s expectations led to disappointment for both.
West reveals how every aspect of the Crater Mountain Wildlife Management Area—including ideas of space, place, environment, and society—was socially produced, created by changing configurations of ideas, actions, and material relations not only in Papua New Guinea but also in other locations around the world. Complicating many of the assumptions about nature, culture, and development underlying contemporary conservation efforts, Conservation Is Our Government Now demonstrates the unique capacity of ethnography to illuminate the relationship between the global and the local, between transnational processes and individual lives.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins
- Mohawk Interruptus: Political Life Across the Borders of Settler States
- Decolonizing Ethnography: Undocumented Immigrants and New Directions in Social Science
- Planet of Slums
- Perfect Order: Recognizing Complexity in Bali (Princeton Studies in Complexity)
- Gods of the Upper Air: How a Circle of Renegade Anthropologists Reinvented Race, Sex, and Gender in the Twentieth Century
- Flammable: Environmental Suffering in an Argentine Shantytown
- The Myth of Progress: Toward a Sustainable Future
- The Darjeeling Distinction: Labor and Justice on Fair-Trade Tea Plantations in India (Volume 47) (California Studies in Food and Culture)
- Environmentalism in Popular Culture: Gender, Race, Sexuality, and the Politics of the Natural
*If this is not the "Conservation Is Our Government Now: The Politics of Ecology in Papua New Guinea (New Ecologies for t" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Nov 14, 2024 16:56 +08.