This article examines a new set of policies embraced by indigenous leaders in the Upper Napo region of the Ecuadorian Amazon, driven, in part, by a growing appreciation for “wilderness” —large areas where humans exercise a very light touch. In the past few years, leaders have pursued wilderness conservation initiatives while simultaneously promoting petroleum extraction in their own backyards. Both political positions run counter to those pursued in previous decades, when opposition to both oil development and strict forms of conservation within their territory was strong. To address this reversal, I trace some of the development interventions and North-South collaborations that have contributed to the emergence of “nature” as a meaningful ...
After decades of civil war, the Colombian government has recently declared the Amazon as a model reg...
UID/ANT/04038/2019It is now widely accepted that research about people and their interactions with w...
The idea of indigenous populations around the world as “noble savages” dominated literature for much...
This article examines a new set of policies embraced by indigenous leaders in the Upper Napo region ...
This paper traces the environmental movements by indigenous peoples in indigenous territories in the...
Accelerating deforestation and ecological degradation, linked to political and economic policies and...
Recent scholarship on the Amazon has challenged depictions of the region that emphasize its natural ...
In summer 2012, I worked for six weeks on an environmental conservation project in the Amazon Rainfo...
Conservation and development discourses are the two main frameworks in which global debates on how t...
In 2008, Ecuador became the first nation in the world to recognize the rights of nature in its Const...
This article examines the Amazonian countries of Peru and Ecuador, their differing policy directions...
During millennia Amazonia has shaped herself as an integrated cosmos of tangible and intangible bein...
In October 2013, a group of indigenous women from the southeastern Ecuadorian Amazon started the “Ma...
Book review of Deforestation and Land Use in the Amazon. Charles H. Wood and Roberto Porro, editors....
Non-governmental organizations are on the forefront of conservation strategies throughout the world,...
After decades of civil war, the Colombian government has recently declared the Amazon as a model reg...
UID/ANT/04038/2019It is now widely accepted that research about people and their interactions with w...
The idea of indigenous populations around the world as “noble savages” dominated literature for much...
This article examines a new set of policies embraced by indigenous leaders in the Upper Napo region ...
This paper traces the environmental movements by indigenous peoples in indigenous territories in the...
Accelerating deforestation and ecological degradation, linked to political and economic policies and...
Recent scholarship on the Amazon has challenged depictions of the region that emphasize its natural ...
In summer 2012, I worked for six weeks on an environmental conservation project in the Amazon Rainfo...
Conservation and development discourses are the two main frameworks in which global debates on how t...
In 2008, Ecuador became the first nation in the world to recognize the rights of nature in its Const...
This article examines the Amazonian countries of Peru and Ecuador, their differing policy directions...
During millennia Amazonia has shaped herself as an integrated cosmos of tangible and intangible bein...
In October 2013, a group of indigenous women from the southeastern Ecuadorian Amazon started the “Ma...
Book review of Deforestation and Land Use in the Amazon. Charles H. Wood and Roberto Porro, editors....
Non-governmental organizations are on the forefront of conservation strategies throughout the world,...
After decades of civil war, the Colombian government has recently declared the Amazon as a model reg...
UID/ANT/04038/2019It is now widely accepted that research about people and their interactions with w...
The idea of indigenous populations around the world as “noble savages” dominated literature for much...