DLC Logo

Digital Library of the Commons

Home Browse Search User Services Submit a Document About Help








Swidden Agriculture and Conservation in Eastern Madagascar: Stakeholder Perspectives and Cultural Belief Systems

Hume, Douglas William. 2006. "Swidden Agriculture and Conservation in Eastern Madagascar: Stakeholder Perspectives and Cultural Belief Systems." Conservation and Society 4(2).

Full text available as:
PDF

Abstract

"This paper describes and discusses several stakeholders' perspectives of agricultural change in eastern Madagascar. The historic and current government-sponsored attempts to facilitate the end of swidden agriculture in eastern Madagascar have largely failed due to particular cultural beliefs held by the rural farmers. The Malagasy government is implementing several agricultural and social policies designed to promote biodiversity conservation and increase crop yields to meet the increased needs of the rising human population. One key aspect of planned agricultural change ignored by the Malagasy government is the impact this change will have on the rural farmers' belief system connected with their traditional agriculture, tavy (swidden agriculture as termed and practised by the Malagasy). As the current plan of the Malagasy government stands, only the political, agricultural, ecological, and economic problems of the agricultural change are part of policymaking. In addition to perspectives from government-sponsored programmes, economic and cultural viewpoints from local rice sellers and rural farmers are presented."

Document Type:Journal Article
Keywords:agriculture--Madagascar
conservation--Madagascar
indigenous institutions--Madagascar
culture--Madagascar
ID Code:2463

 

This is an open-access digital library and archive.
Copyright for DLC documents is retained by the authors.
Use and distribution by you is subject to citation of the original source.
Questions or Comments: Email to Digital Library of the Commons
Copyright 2003, The Trustees of Indiana University