Governing indigenous territories in the Peruvian Amazon : placing people or forest first?

The current competition for land in the Peruvian Amazon presents a challenge to many indige-nous communities which do not have legal ownership over their customary lands. In response to this challenge, several actions have been taken by indigenous groups to gain possession over forest areas which th...

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Autor principal: Egerlid, Josefin
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development 2015
Materias:
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author Egerlid, Josefin
author_browse Egerlid, Josefin
author_facet Egerlid, Josefin
author_sort Egerlid, Josefin
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description The current competition for land in the Peruvian Amazon presents a challenge to many indige-nous communities which do not have legal ownership over their customary lands. In response to this challenge, several actions have been taken by indigenous groups to gain possession over forest areas which they consider as part of their ancestral territories. This thesis analyses the strategies of Alto Huaja, a Kechwa-Lamista community in the region of San Martín, to get a collective title for their communal forest territory. More specifically, it explores how this strug-gle is being influenced by different external actors and their views and models for how indige-nous territories should be governed. Through the lens of governmentality, the thesis explores the two main tenure arrangements under discussion in San Martín – conservation concession and title – the rationales that underpin them and their possible consequences for Alto Huaja. The data was collected through participatory observation and informal interviews in Alto Huaja and semi-structured interviews with nine organizations (governmental authorities, NGOs and indigenous organizations) that are connected to Alto Huaja. The results suggest that the Ke-chwa-Lamista’s opportunities to control their ancestral lands are becoming more tied to their ability to do conservation and behave as ‘ecological natives’ rather than their rights as indige-nous peoples, a development that could turn them from being farmers to becoming conserva-tionists.
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institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2015
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spelling RepoSLU86232015-11-17T13:36:28Z Governing indigenous territories in the Peruvian Amazon : placing people or forest first? Egerlid, Josefin communities conservation indigenous Kechwa-Lamista native territory title The current competition for land in the Peruvian Amazon presents a challenge to many indige-nous communities which do not have legal ownership over their customary lands. In response to this challenge, several actions have been taken by indigenous groups to gain possession over forest areas which they consider as part of their ancestral territories. This thesis analyses the strategies of Alto Huaja, a Kechwa-Lamista community in the region of San Martín, to get a collective title for their communal forest territory. More specifically, it explores how this strug-gle is being influenced by different external actors and their views and models for how indige-nous territories should be governed. Through the lens of governmentality, the thesis explores the two main tenure arrangements under discussion in San Martín – conservation concession and title – the rationales that underpin them and their possible consequences for Alto Huaja. The data was collected through participatory observation and informal interviews in Alto Huaja and semi-structured interviews with nine organizations (governmental authorities, NGOs and indigenous organizations) that are connected to Alto Huaja. The results suggest that the Ke-chwa-Lamista’s opportunities to control their ancestral lands are becoming more tied to their ability to do conservation and behave as ‘ecological natives’ rather than their rights as indige-nous peoples, a development that could turn them from being farmers to becoming conserva-tionists. SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development 2015 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/8623/
spellingShingle communities
conservation
indigenous
Kechwa-Lamista
native
territory
title
Egerlid, Josefin
Governing indigenous territories in the Peruvian Amazon : placing people or forest first?
title Governing indigenous territories in the Peruvian Amazon : placing people or forest first?
title_full Governing indigenous territories in the Peruvian Amazon : placing people or forest first?
title_fullStr Governing indigenous territories in the Peruvian Amazon : placing people or forest first?
title_full_unstemmed Governing indigenous territories in the Peruvian Amazon : placing people or forest first?
title_short Governing indigenous territories in the Peruvian Amazon : placing people or forest first?
title_sort governing indigenous territories in the peruvian amazon : placing people or forest first?
topic communities
conservation
indigenous
Kechwa-Lamista
native
territory
title