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MARKET ENVIRONMENTALISM (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   142660


Neoliberalisation of forestry governance, market environmentalism and re-territorialisation in Uganda / Nel, Adrian   Article
Nel, Adrian Article
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Summary/Abstract There is often a disjuncture between idealised forestry governance models which posit a ‘win-win for community and environment’ through participatory, multi-stakeholder international development discourses and interventions – and the actually existing processes and structures of natural resource government through which they are articulated. By applying, first, established theorisations of the initial territorialisation of state forestry territory, then conceptualisations of re- and de-territorialisation, derived from Deleuzo-Guattarian formulations, this paper expands on post-structuralist lines of inquiry on the political ecology of forestry to explore substantive transformations in forestry governance in Uganda. It specifically details the role that market environmentalism – the extension of market mechanisms, including carbon forestry, to natural resource governance – plays in reorienting assemblages of actors engaged in forestry governance and in changing configurations of state forestry territory.
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2
ID:   161254


Retrospective Illusion of Market Environmentalism and Human Right to Water / Deka, Bhaskar Jyoti   Journal Article
Deka, Bhaskar Jyoti Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract In the recent decades, the concept of ‘market environmentalism’ (ME) and the process of ‘neo-liberalisation of nature’ took roots in the discourse of natural resources management. Commercialisation, privatisation, and market mechanisms are replacing public policies vis-à-vis resource governance. Simultaneously, the notion of environmental services has also become a sustained discourse. The movements for establishing human right to water (HRtW) and decentralisation of environmental governance are also on the rise.
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