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OverviewIn Africa, conflicts between protected areas for fauna and flora and their surrounding human populations continue despite years spent trying to find an accommodation between the needs of both parties. Creating Africas investigates the roots of the current conservation boom, demonstrates that it is part of a struggle over definitions of realities, and examines the global effects of this struggle. The book discusses the first UNESCO World Heritage Site in South Africa, the Isimangaliso (St Lucia) Wetland Park. Here, conservation interests are pitted against those of industrial forestry, commercial farming, and the local communities struggling to have their land returned to them. They all seek to define and create their own realities but do so with very different resources at their disposal. These realities are treated not as different representations but rather as multiple, often competing, realities that involve a wide range of actors, both human and non- human. The book argues that to avoid being accused of neo-colonial land grabbing, the conservation lobby will need to find a way of imagining nature and protection that includes people. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Knut G. NustadPublisher: C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd Imprint: C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd Dimensions: Width: 13.70cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 21.30cm Weight: 0.295kg ISBN: 9781849042581ISBN 10: 1849042586 Pages: 204 Publication Date: 15 April 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviews'Drawing on a lucid synthesis of current anthropological debates about ontology, materiality, and enactment, Knut Nustad offers an acute ethnography of the history and politics of the Dukuduku forest in South Africa. This is an intensely used and contested landscape, where sugar farmers, small holders, and conservationists enact different natures and forms of politics. Creating Africas helps us think about how we might live differently in the natural world, and in so doing, begin to craft a more hopeful environmental politics.' - Andrew S. Mathews, Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Cruz, and author of 'Instituting Nature: Authority, Expertise and Power in Mexican Forests' ' Creating Africas is a theoretically innovative work, thinking through the implications of the ontological turn in anthropology for the study of communities and protected areas. It is also an important contribution to the study of protected areas in Africa, highlighting the ways the history of parks in KwaZulu-Natal diverge from the Yellowstone Model . Nustad combines history and ethnography to show the how the Dukuduku forest came to be both conservation nature and a site of small-scale agriculture, and highlights the ongoing conflicts between these competing ontologies of place. Highly recommended.' - Derick A. Fay, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Riverside 'Drawing on a lucid synthesis of current anthropological debates about ontology, materiality, and enactment, Knut Nustad offers an acute ethnography of the history and politics of the Dukuduku forest in South Africa. This is an intensely used and contested landscape, where sugar farmers, small holders, and conservationists enact different natures and forms of politics. Creating Africas helps us think about how we might live differently in the natural world, and in so doing, begin to craft a more hopeful environmental politics.' - Andrew S. Mathews, Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Cruz, and author of 'Instituting Nature: Authority, Expertise and Power in Mexican Forests' ' Creating Africas is a theoretically innovative work, thinking through the implications of the ontological turn in anthropology for the study of communities and protected areas. It is also an important contribution to the study of protected areas in Africa, highlighting the ways the history of parks in KwaZulu-Natal diverge from the Yellowstone Model . Nustad combines history and ethnography to show the how the Dukuduku forest came to be both conservation nature and a site of small-scale agriculture, and highlights the ongoing conflicts between these competing ontologies of place. Highly recommended.' - Derick A. Fay, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Riverside 'Drawing on a lucid synthesis of current anthropological debates about ontology, materiality, and enactment, Knut Nustad offers an acute ethnography of the history and politics of the Dukuduku forest in South Africa. This is an intensely used and contested landscape, where sugar farmers, small holders, and conservationists enact different natures and forms of politics. Creating Africas helps us think about how we might live differently in the natural world, and in so doing, begin to craft a more hopeful environmental politics.' - Andrew S. Mathews, Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Cruz, and author of 'Instituting Nature: Authority, Expertise and Power in Mexican Forests' Author InformationKnut G. Nustad has written about urban policy, informal processes and development policy, as well as the anthropology of state formation and conflicts around protected areas in South Africa. He is Associate Professor at the University of Oslo and Senior Researcher at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |