Time as the Enemy? Disjointed Timelines and Uneven Rhythms of Indigenous Collective Land Titling in Paraguay and Cambodia

Author:

Tusing Cari12ORCID,Leemann Esther3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Anthropological Studies, Austral University of Chile, Valdivia 5110566, Chile

2. Department of Anthropology, University of Copenhagen, 1958 Copenhagen, Denmark

3. Department of Social Anthropology and Cultural Studies, University of Zurich, 8050 Zurich, Switzerland

Abstract

Indigenous Land law reforms in Paraguay and Cambodia proposed collective land titling to secure land tenure through community ownership. When we look at land formalization through a temporal lens, we see the on-the-ground dynamics of how communal title may or may not be achieved by examining the ethnographic case studies of Guarani and Bunong land titling. We argue that the temporality of land titling processes creates disjointed, shifting timelines mediated by relationships of power and disrupted by fast-tracked private and state concessions. This uneven relationship between time and titling interrupts, undermines and fragments Indigenous land possession with serious ecological and livelihood impacts.

Funder

University of Arizona, Inter-American Foundation, US Department of Education

National Science Foundation

P.E.O. Foundation

Swiss National Science Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Global and Planetary Change

Reference79 articles.

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4. Unravelling the Link between Global Rubber Price and Tropical Deforestation in Cambodia;Grogan;Nat. Plants,2019

5. (2021). Technical Report of the Mondul Kiri Provincial Spatial Plan, Provincial Administration of Mondul Kiri.

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