Forest Creators, Forest Destroyers: Akha Land Use in Xishuangbanna
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Date
2000
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Abstract
"Forest policies in the uplands of Xishuangbanna have designated areas of state forest, as well as allocating collective forests to villages, and plots of freehold forest and shifting cultivation fields to ethnic minority households. State property rights and land use regulations have sought to settle villagers, control their use of trees, and maintain village forests as subsistence resources. Meanwhile other kinds of policies have steadily encouraged greater market participation through commoditization of agricultural products and NTFPs.
"Akha villagers, who have managed these forests for centuries, demonstrate an understanding of the plasticity of the landscape in responding both to forest policies and to market opportunities. Akha farmers may be simultaneously regenerating new forests on old pastures, turning swiddens into wet rice fields, mining tin in old wet rice areas, and burning contiguous swiddens to become new pastures. While state administrators view these shifts in land use as 'backward' and 'uncontrolled,' ethnographic research shows that new land uses reveal both familiarity with ecosystems as well as strategies to claim resources in local access conflicts. Some changes, such as opening wet rice fields in shifting cultivation land, turn fallows into permanent, annually-used sites of production. Other shifts, such as burning swiddens for pasture, actually change informal access rights from household to collective. Akha villagers both destroy and create forests, responding to the 'socialist market economy' in ways that confound state property designations and rework the meaning of 'development' in the mountains."
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IASC, common pool resources, forest management, land tenure and use, indigenous institutions, traditional resource management, forest policy, commodification