Saving the Other Amazon: Changing Understandings of Nature and Wilderness among Indigenous Leaders in the Ecuadorian Amazon
This article examines a new set of policies embraced by indigenous leaders in the Upper Napo region of the Ecuadorian Amazon, driven, in part, by a growing appreciation for “wilderness” —large areas where humans exercise a very light touch. In the past few years, leaders have pursued wilderness cons...
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doaj-db1ac94816b74bc58d3d34fadce780c02020-11-24T22:39:29ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872016-07-01536010.3390/h5030060h5030060Saving the Other Amazon: Changing Understandings of Nature and Wilderness among Indigenous Leaders in the Ecuadorian AmazonJuliet S. Erazo0Department of Global and Sociocultural Studies, Florida International University, 11200 SW 8th Street, Miami, FL 33199, USAThis article examines a new set of policies embraced by indigenous leaders in the Upper Napo region of the Ecuadorian Amazon, driven, in part, by a growing appreciation for “wilderness” —large areas where humans exercise a very light touch. In the past few years, leaders have pursued wilderness conservation initiatives while simultaneously promoting petroleum extraction in their own backyards. Both political positions run counter to those pursued in previous decades, when opposition to both oil development and strict forms of conservation within their territory was strong. To address this reversal, I trace some of the development interventions and North-South collaborations that have contributed to the emergence of “nature” as a meaningful imaginary for Amazonian indigenous leaders and for a new generation of young people, drawing connections to William Cronon’s critical analysis of how wilderness conservation became a priority in the United States. I conclude that more than two decades of conservationist interventions in the Upper Napo region have led to some largely unintended consequences, as Amazonian leaders increasingly subscribe to Northern environmentalists’ romanticization of “the Amazon” as a wild place, one that therefore must be distant from the places where they work and live.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/5/3/60indigenous peoplesAmazonwilderness conservationKichwaEcuadorNGOsdevelopmentlandscape perception |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Juliet S. Erazo |
spellingShingle |
Juliet S. Erazo Saving the Other Amazon: Changing Understandings of Nature and Wilderness among Indigenous Leaders in the Ecuadorian Amazon Humanities indigenous peoples Amazon wilderness conservation Kichwa Ecuador NGOs development landscape perception |
author_facet |
Juliet S. Erazo |
author_sort |
Juliet S. Erazo |
title |
Saving the Other Amazon: Changing Understandings of Nature and Wilderness among Indigenous Leaders in the Ecuadorian Amazon |
title_short |
Saving the Other Amazon: Changing Understandings of Nature and Wilderness among Indigenous Leaders in the Ecuadorian Amazon |
title_full |
Saving the Other Amazon: Changing Understandings of Nature and Wilderness among Indigenous Leaders in the Ecuadorian Amazon |
title_fullStr |
Saving the Other Amazon: Changing Understandings of Nature and Wilderness among Indigenous Leaders in the Ecuadorian Amazon |
title_full_unstemmed |
Saving the Other Amazon: Changing Understandings of Nature and Wilderness among Indigenous Leaders in the Ecuadorian Amazon |
title_sort |
saving the other amazon: changing understandings of nature and wilderness among indigenous leaders in the ecuadorian amazon |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Humanities |
issn |
2076-0787 |
publishDate |
2016-07-01 |
description |
This article examines a new set of policies embraced by indigenous leaders in the Upper Napo region of the Ecuadorian Amazon, driven, in part, by a growing appreciation for “wilderness” —large areas where humans exercise a very light touch. In the past few years, leaders have pursued wilderness conservation initiatives while simultaneously promoting petroleum extraction in their own backyards. Both political positions run counter to those pursued in previous decades, when opposition to both oil development and strict forms of conservation within their territory was strong. To address this reversal, I trace some of the development interventions and North-South collaborations that have contributed to the emergence of “nature” as a meaningful imaginary for Amazonian indigenous leaders and for a new generation of young people, drawing connections to William Cronon’s critical analysis of how wilderness conservation became a priority in the United States. I conclude that more than two decades of conservationist interventions in the Upper Napo region have led to some largely unintended consequences, as Amazonian leaders increasingly subscribe to Northern environmentalists’ romanticization of “the Amazon” as a wild place, one that therefore must be distant from the places where they work and live. |
topic |
indigenous peoples Amazon wilderness conservation Kichwa Ecuador NGOs development landscape perception |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/5/3/60 |
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