ISBN:
9780295995472
,
9780295995489
,
0295995475
,
0295995483
Language:
English
Pages:
xxvi, 283 Seiten
,
Illustrationen, Karten
,
24 cm
Series Statement:
Culture, place, and nature: studies in anthropology and environment
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als McElwee, Pamela D. Forests are gold
DDC:
333.7509597
Keywords:
Forest policy History
;
Forest management History
;
Forest policy History
;
Vietnam
;
Forest management History
;
Vietnam
;
Forest and community History
;
Vietnam
;
Vietnam
;
Forstwirtschaft
;
Ethnoökologie
;
Vietnam
;
Forstwirtschaft
;
Forstpolitik
;
Geschichte
Abstract:
"Ho Chi Minh, the founder of modern Vietnam, once famously remarked that "forests are gold--if we know to protect and develop them well, they will be very precious." Ho's statement conveys important ideas about nature, the state, and society that are relevant in understanding contemporary environmental issues in Vietnam. For Ho and other political leaders, forests have been about more than trees: they were about the development and administration of both people and landscapes. This book presents a genealogy of forest management in Vietnam from the beginning of French colonial rule to the present day. Using detailed ethnographic, interview, archival and biological data, Pamela McElwee presents a nuanced perspective on environmental change through the eyes of subjects on the ground. By explaining how knowledge about forests was generated, and by whom, and how this knowledge was used by different actors engaged in forest governance, the book shows that forests are not "natural" entities outside of human influence"--
Abstract:
"Ho Chi Minh, the founder of modern Vietnam, once famously remarked that "forests are gold--if we know to protect and develop them well, they will be very precious." Ho's statement conveys important ideas about nature, the state, and society that are relevant in understanding contemporary environmental issues in Vietnam. For Ho and other political leaders, forests have been about more than trees: they were about the development and administration of both people and landscapes. This book presents a genealogy of forest management in Vietnam from the beginning of French colonial rule to the present day. Using detailed ethnographic, interview, archival and biological data, Pamela McElwee presents a nuanced perspective on environmental change through the eyes of subjects on the ground. By explaining how knowledge about forests was generated, and by whom, and how this knowledge was used by different actors engaged in forest governance, the book shows that forests are not "natural" entities outside of human influence"--
Description / Table of Contents:
Introduction : seeing the trees and people for the forestsForests for profit or posterity? : the emergence of environmental rule under French colonialism -- Planting new people : socialism, settlement, and subjectivity in the postcolonial forest -- Illegal loggers and heroic rangers : the discovery of deforestation in đổi mới (renovation) Vietnam -- Rule by reforestation : classifying bare hills and claiming forest transitions -- Calculating carbon and ecosystem services : new regimes of environmental rule for forests -- Conclusion : environmental rule in the twenty-first century.
Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index
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