This article analyzes the contested struggles over protection and production in the Nicaraguan biological reserve of Indio-Maíz as a local example of broader conflicts over wilderness preservation and local livelihoods in the developing world. The main focus is on conflicting views of different stakeholders concerning the access to and control over natural resources. Special attention is given to the local inhabitants’ struggles for everyday survival and social justice on the fringe of the restricted-use reserve. The study emphasizes that in densely populated rural areas, such as Central America, inclusionary conservation represents the politically most feasible and socially most just form of conservation possible. © 2004 Taylor & Francis Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Nygren, A. (2004). Contested lands and incompatible images: The political ecology of struggles over resources in nicaragua’s indio-maíz reserve. Society and Natural Resources, 17(3), 189–205. https://doi.org/10.1080/08941920490270221
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