AltaMira Press
Pages: 240
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7591-0738-0 • Paperback • September 2006 • $47.00 • (£36.00)
978-0-7591-1410-4 • eBook • September 2006 • $44.50 • (£35.00)
Lisa Gezon received her Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Michigan, and is currently Chair and Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of West Georgia. She has ongoing research projects in Madagascar and in the Georgia Piedmont on the politics of environmental resource management, and continues her research interests in issues of political ecology in the United States and abroad.
1 Chapter 1: Negotiated Landscapes
2 PART I: Place in Perspective
3 Chapter 2: The Global in the Local: Protected Area Management
4 Chapter 3: Antankarana: Ethnic Identity, Royal Authority, and History
5 Chapter 4: Patterns of Production
6 Chapter 5: Conjunctures of Authority
7 Part II: Resource Use as Socio-Political Process
8 Chapter 6: The Missing Cattle: Shifting Relationships between Agriculture and Herding
9 Chapter 7: Ritual and the Legitimacy of Kings: Rights to Forests and Graves
10 Chapter 8: Making Place: Conservation and the Limits of Royal Authority
11 Chapter 9: Managed Landscapes
[This] book is an important contribution to Malagasy studies and the dynamics of natural resource management, particularly in relation to conservation. The study is a must-read for everyone interested in these issues, precisely because it offers ethnography and anaylsis which lay bare the intrinsic foundations of the local politics dealt with and engaged in by international conservation agencies.
— Journal Of The Royal Anthropological Institute, December 2008