Political Ecology of REDD+ in Indonesia : : Agrarian Conflicts and Forest Carbon.
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Superior document: | Routledge Studies in Political Ecology Series |
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Place / Publishing House: | Milton : : Taylor & Francis Group,, 2018. Ã2019. |
Year of Publication: | 2018 |
Edition: | 1st ed. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Routledge Studies in Political Ecology Series
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Online Access: | |
Physical Description: | 1 online resource (230 pages) |
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Table of Contents:
- Cover
- Half Title
- Series
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of figures and tables
- 1 Introduction
- Introducing the politics of REDD+ and peasant resistance
- A guide through the book
- 2 Conceptual, theoretical and methodological underpinning for a political ecology of transnational agrarian conflicts
- Political ecology
- Linking social-spatial theory with conservation territories and property relations
- Conceptualizing power and resistance
- Key arguments
- Multi-sited qualitative research
- 3 Rescaling of the governance of forests and land in Indonesia
- The history of Indonesia's forest and land tenure governance
- Access to different types of de jure land and forest rights
- Jambi's contested landscapes: from dispossession and development to conservation
- De facto land tenure and the "making" of new property in the state forest territory
- Counter territories and settlement schemes prior to the formation of the Harapan Rainforest project
- Village-scale peat-swamp conversion and settlement schemes in the surroundings of the Berbak Carbon Initiative
- Summary and preliminary conclusion
- 4 REDD+, privatization and transnationalization of conservation in Indonesia
- REDD+ governance and attempts to commodify forest carbon
- Indonesian REDD+ governance
- Privatization and transnationalization of conservation: conservation concessions and co-management
- Summary and preliminary conclusion
- 5 Transnationalized agrarian conflicts in the REDD+
- The formation of resistance movements and alternative scales of meaning and regulation
- Agro-industrial expansion, land concentration and violence at Jambi's oil palm frontier
- Conservation vs. agrarian reform: conflict between SPI and the Harapan Rainforest
- The conflict about Kunangan Jaya I: defending village expansion.
- We are here to stay: the conflicts in Camp Gunung and Tanjung Mandiri
- Peasants, migrants and the state: conflicts among state apparatuses concerning access to and control of the Berbak Carbon Initiative
- Summary and preliminary conclusion
- 6 Conclusion: towards a political ecology of transnational agrarian conflicts
- Elements for a political ecology of transnational agrarian conflict
- Final remarks: implications for REDD+, uneven development and future directions of research for political ecology
- References
- Index.