Development discourses and peasant-forest relations: Natural resource utilization as social process

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Abstract

This article analyses the changing role of forests and the practices of peasants toward them in a Costa Rican rural community, drawing on an analytical perspective of political ecology, combined with cultural interpretations. The study underlines the complex articulation of local processes and global forces in tropical forest struggles. Deforestation is seen as a process of development and power involving multiple social actors, from politicians and development experts to a heterogeneous group of local peasants. The local people are not passive victims of global challenges, but are instead directly involved in the changes concerning their production systems and livelihood strategies. In the light of historical changes in natural resource utilization, the article underlines the multiplicity of the causes of tropical deforestation, and the intricate links between global discourses on environment and development and local forest relations.

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APA

Nygren, A. (2000). Development discourses and peasant-forest relations: Natural resource utilization as social process. Development and Change, 31(1), 11–34. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-7660.00145

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