Affiliation:
1. School of Anthropology Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
2. Keller Science Action Center, Science and Education, Field Museum of Natural History Chicago IL USA
Abstract
AbstractIn Patagonia, emerging concerns over environmental degradation in frontier territories suggest the constitution of a new type of frontier—the conservation frontier—in which nature is an object of consumption rather than extraction. Conservation frontiers are made through disputed forms of spatialization, in which wilderness can be a refuge, a source of capital accumulation, and a new space for political experimentation. Three overlapping yet conflicting processes constitute the conservation frontier: nation‐building, green productivism, and environmentalism. The material and discursive making of a conservation frontier illustrates how environmental conservation both disrupts and extends settler projects of territorialization.
Funder
University of California, Santa Cruz
Fondo de Financiamiento de Centros de Investigación en Áreas Prioritarias
Instituto Millenium
Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico
Cited by
2 articles.
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