马达加斯加保护政治的历史

Catherine A. Corson
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引用次数: 12

摘要

在这篇文章中,我认为调和保育与马达加斯加的生计,需要检视历史进程与政治经济制度,正是透过这些过程,外国对保育产生了强大的影响。我首先记录了一群科学家和决策者如何在20世纪70年代和80年代聚集在一起,动员全球关注保护马达加斯加动植物的重要性。我说明了他们的影响如何不仅通过正式的政治谈判和官僚实践实现,而且通过跨多个地理和机构地点的非正式合作实现。然后,我研究了20世纪80年代中期的关键历史时刻——强调生物多样性、可持续发展和新自由主义——是如何促使公共、私人和非营利行为体之间的权力关系重新配置的。这种重新配置为将一项科学运动转变为一项资金充足的外援议程提供了政治-经济背景,该议程包含在《马达加斯加国家环境行动计划》中。我举例说明,尽管在马达加斯加的整个环境历史中,有许多行动者提倡综合保护和发展方法,但国际保护游说团体背后的政治、科学和财政力量往往压倒了推动更全面或综合发展方法的力量。最后,我认为马达加斯加有效和公平的环境保护需要改变造成马达加斯加环境危机的权力关系,并努力纠正它。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A history of conservation politics in Madagascar
In this article, I argue that reconciling conservation and livelihoods in Madagascar requires an examination of the historical processes and political-economic systems through which the strong foreign influence on conservation has formed. I begin by documenting how a group of scientists and policy-makers came together in the 1970s and 1980s to mobilize global attention to the importance of protecting Madagascar’s flora and fauna. I illustrate how their influence materialized not only through formal political negotiations and bureaucratic practice but also via informal collaborations across multiple geographic and institutional sites. Then, I examine how the critical historical conjuncture of the mid-1980s—with its emphasis on biodiversity, sustainable development and neoliberalism—prompted a reconfiguration in power relations among public, private, and nonprofit actors. This reconfiguration provided the political-economic context for the transformation of a scientific campaign into a well-funded foreign aid agenda, encompassed in the Madagascar National Environmental Action Plan. I illustrate how, although numerous actors advocated for integrated conservation and development approaches throughout Madagascar’s environmental history, the political, scientific, and financial strength behind the international conservation lobby often overpowered the push for more comprehensive or integrated development approaches. Finally, I conclude by arguing that effective and equitable conservation in Madagascar will require transforming the power relations that have both created Madagascar’s environmental crisis and efforts to redress it.
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