Conservation, Markets & the Environment in Southern and Eastern Africa: Commodifying the ‘Wild’
Focuses on a much discussed and controversial aspect of conservation: the commodification of nature. Can the successful marketization of what is generally perceived as wilderness help to provide for biodiversity conservation, economic development and social emancipation? At a time of profound anxiet...
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Zusammenfassung: | Focuses on a much discussed and controversial aspect of
conservation: the commodification of nature. Can the successful
marketization of what is generally perceived as wilderness help to
provide for biodiversity conservation, economic development and
social emancipation? At a time of profound anxiety about
the impact of human activity on nature and the catastrophic effects
of climate change, the "sixth mass extinction", invasive species
and rapidly expanding zoonotic diseases, this volume engages with
the practices, discourses, and materialities surrounding the
commodification of "the wild". Focusing on the relationship between
commodification and wilderness, the contributors pay particular
attention to commodification's newer iterations in which human
management plays a significant role, such as wildlife-park tourism,
trophy-hunting, and trade in herbal medicines, perfumes and luxury
exotic food items. Dominant neoliberal approaches have aimed to
address global environmental challenges through the commodification
and marketization of nature: by valorizing nature, they claim,
biodiversity can be safeguarded and "wild" landscapes protected.
This, it is thought, will not only open up a new frontier of
sustainable, non-exploitative, participatory capitalist expansion,
but invigorate rural livelihoods, reduce poverty, and add important
assets to otherwise vulnerable rural economies. This important book
challenges this future trajectory. Investigating a broad range of
cases across southern and eastern Africa, from the illegal
sandalwood trade to legal trade in devil's claw and honeybush, to
trophy-hunting and wilderness safaris, the contributors reveal the
pitfalls and challenges of commodification, what this means for the
continent and beyond. OPEN ACCESS: This title is available under
the Creative Commons license CC-BY-NC-ND |
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DOI: | 10.2307/jj.3643592 |