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ID138257
Title ProperShades of green and REDD
Other Title Informationlocal and global contestations over the value of forest versus plantation development on the Indonesian forest frontier
LanguageENG
AuthorEilenberg, Michael
Summary / Abstract (Note)In a time of increasing land enclosures sparked by large-scale environmental initiatives and agricultural expansion, this paper examines local and global contestations over the value of forest on an Indonesian forest frontier. Engaging with recent debates on carbon forestry, the paper problematises the emerging initiatives of ‘Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation’ known as REDD+ in the province of West Kalimantan, Indonesia. The paper argues that the general rush to implement REDD+ without intimate knowledge of the political landscape of resource struggle is in danger of generating new enclosures of land that may be easily appropriated by local elites, thus excluding less fortunate sections of local society. The paper shows how divergent interpretations of REDD+ are triggering land disputes, and how powerful actors readily appropriate REDD+ discourses as a tool to support divergent claims of land ownership. Government and villagers, through overlapping and contradictory engagements, negotiate REDD+ initiatives with global environmental actors and private plantation companies. The paper highlights the implications of these local realities for the successes of REDD+. The Kalimantan case highlights some of the dilemmas of carbon mitigation initiatives experienced in frontier regions throughout Southeast Asia, places that have become prime battlefronts of large-scale climate change initiatives and agrarian expansion.
`In' analytical NoteAsia Pacific Viewpoint Vol. 56, No.1; Apr 2015: p.48-61
Journal SourceAsia Pacific Viewpoint 2015-04 56, 1
Key WordsIndonesia ;  Conservation ;  Oil Palm ;  REDD+ ;  Forest Frontiers ;  Land Enclosures