Contest for land in Madagascar : : environment, ancestors and development / / edited by Sandra J.T.M. Evers, Gwyn Campbell, Michael Lambek.

The Malagasy possess a profound religious, socio-political and economic attachment to land which connects individuals and kinship groups with the ancestors. International stakeholders value Madagascar for its biodiversity, minerals and agricultural potential, while the Malagasy state views land as t...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:African social studies series, volume 31
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden : : Brill,, 2013.
Year of Publication:2013
Language:English
Series:African social studies series ; v. 31.
Physical Description:1 online resource (264 p.)
Notes:Description based upon print version of record.
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Description
Other title:Preliminary Material /
Land Competition and Human-Environment Relations in Madagascar /
The Genetic Trail to Madagascar /
Don’t we all Want a World Filled with “Bright Faces” and “Fat-Cheeked Babies”? Creating the State and Crafting Ideology in Eighteenth Century Imerina /
Forest Depletion in Imperial Madagascar, c.1790–1861 /
Solving Madagascar: Science, Illustrations, and the Normalizing of Fauna of Nineteenth Century Madagascar /
Lex Loci meets Lex Fori: Merging Customary Law and National Land Legislation in Madagascar /
Land Rights and Alien Plants in Dryland Madagascar /
Parenting through Boom and Bust in a Northern Malagasy Mining Town /
Discourse, Development and Legitimacy: Nature/Culture Dualism of Mining Engagements in Biodiversity Offsetting and Conservation in Madagascar /
How the Daewoo Attempted Land Acquisition Contributed to Madagascar’s Political Crisis in 2009 /
Index /
Summary:The Malagasy possess a profound religious, socio-political and economic attachment to land which connects individuals and kinship groups with the ancestors. International stakeholders value Madagascar for its biodiversity, minerals and agricultural potential, while the Malagasy state views land as the necessary platform for its economic development. This collection presents original research by established and rising scholars across a broad spectrum of disciplines, including Human Genetics, Anthropology and History. Authors focus on land as the pivotal factor underlying the economic, social and religious structures of Malagasy society and its relationship with outsiders, aiming to provide new insights into the issues underlying Madagascar’s ongoing economic and political malaise.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9004256237
ISSN:1568-1203 ;
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: edited by Sandra J.T.M. Evers, Gwyn Campbell, Michael Lambek.