How global narratives shape local management: A history of fire in the tropical savannas of Belize and Guyana

GEOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL(2024)

引用 0|浏览6
暂无评分
摘要
The suppression of anthropogenic fire is an important legacy of European colonisation worldwide. Fire suppression has undermined human livelihoods and fire-dependent ecologies. Belize and Guyana are the only former British colonies on the mainland of Central and South America. Both countries have fire-dependent tropical savanna ecosystems, where fire is used within local livelihoods, for example, for hunting. We compare the creation and implementation of savanna fire suppression and management policies and projects by agencies in twentieth to twenty-first-century Belize and Guyana, and the extent to which global environmental narratives have shaped this process. In both countries, a picture emerges of weak state efforts to control fire, largely driven by economic concerns. In colonial Belize, the state made intermittent attempts to suppress or manage savanna fires in limited areas, owing to interest in pine forestry. In Guyana, the colonial state did not attempt to control fires, given economic interest in cattle ranching, and the remoteness of the savannas. Since 2000, both states have developed new fire policies, and state agencies, conservation non-governmental organisations and Indigenous advocacy groups have won funding for fire-related projects. We show that these contemporary policies and projects, like those of the colonial period, primarily financed by inconsistent international funding, continue to lean heavily on international discourses about fire that make assumptions about fire problems and propose solutions incompatible with local realities. Understanding the local geography, ecology and politics, and recognising the ways colonial fire legacies altered, and continue to impact these places, could inform more just and productive approaches to working with local fire users in Belize, Guyana and beyond. Belize and Guyana, both former British colonies, have tropical savanna ecosystems where fire is used for local livelihood activities such as hunting. We compare their twentieth and twenty-first-century histories of savanna fire policy and agency savanna fire suppression and management. Fire policy and project texts have been strongly shaped by global environmental narratives because of reliance on international funding, but local economic priorities and local geography limited fire operations in practice.image
更多
查看译文
关键词
Belize,British colonialism,fire management,fire suppression,Guyana,tropical savannas
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要