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Taming the jungle, saving the maya forest: sedimented counterinsurgency practices in contemporary Guatemalan conservation

Por: Ybarra, Megan [autor/a].
Tipo de material: Artículo
 impreso(a) 
 Artículo impreso(a) Tema(s): Reservas naturales | Soldados | Disturbio ecológico | Política ambientalDescriptor(es) geográficos: Alta Verapaz (Guatemala) | Petén (Guatemala) En: The Journal of Peasant Studies. volumen 39, número 2 (April 2012), páginas 479-502. --ISSN: 0306-6150Número de sistema: 51398Resumen:
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This paper examines the significance of historically sedimented military practices for conservation in contemporary Guatemala. During a 36-year civil war, the military represented the lowlands as dangerous jungle that had to be tamed to justify its counterinsurgency campaigns, thus positioning the jungle's inhabitants as suspect citizens or potential insurgents. Also during the war, international conservationists coalesced to successfully lobby for a protected areas system that enclosed one-third of Guatemala's territory. This paper argues that this transnational conservation alliance, comprised of international conservation agencies and national elites, evokes the violence of scorched earth counterinsurgency. The use of jungle and forest discourses in successive territorial projects produces a racialized landscape that connects a violent past to a violent present. In recent years, jungle discourses have articulated advocacy for increased militarization to fight the 'war on drugs' in protected areas. As such, I argue that conservation agencies and the military are complicit in reproducing social inequalities, often through violent exclusions.

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This paper examines the significance of historically sedimented military practices for conservation in contemporary Guatemala. During a 36-year civil war, the military represented the lowlands as dangerous jungle that had to be tamed to justify its counterinsurgency campaigns, thus positioning the jungle's inhabitants as suspect citizens or potential insurgents. Also during the war, international conservationists coalesced to successfully lobby for a protected areas system that enclosed one-third of Guatemala's territory. This paper argues that this transnational conservation alliance, comprised of international conservation agencies and national elites, evokes the violence of scorched earth counterinsurgency. The use of jungle and forest discourses in successive territorial projects produces a racialized landscape that connects a violent past to a violent present. In recent years, jungle discourses have articulated advocacy for increased militarization to fight the 'war on drugs' in protected areas. As such, I argue that conservation agencies and the military are complicit in reproducing social inequalities, often through violent exclusions. eng

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