ABSTRACT

Taking a unique anthropological apprach, Bush Base: Forest Farm explores the management of resources in third would development programmes. The contributors, all distinguished anthropologists with practical experience of development projects, focus on the role of human cultural imagination in the use of environmental resources. They challenge the traditional sharp distinction between human settlement and natual environment (farm or camp, forest or bush), and argue that development programmes should place at their centre an appreciation of people's cosmologies and cultural understandings.

part II|92 pages

Ecocosmologies

chapter 5|21 pages

Women's crops in women's spaces

Gender relations in Mende rice farming

chapter 6|13 pages

Ideas and usage

Environment in Aouan society, Ivory Coast

chapter 7|19 pages

Ritual topography and ecological use

The Gabbra of the Kenyan/Ethiopian borderlands

part III|118 pages

Changing to order

chapter 9|23 pages

Intolerable environments

Towards a cultural reading of agrarian practice and policy in Rwanda

chapter 10|18 pages

Cows eat grass don't they?

Evaluating conflict over pastoral management in Zimbabwe 1

chapter 11|13 pages

From sago to rice

Changes in cultivation in Siberut, Indonesia

chapter 12|18 pages

‘Nature’, ‘culture’ and disasters

Floods and gender in Bangladesh

chapter 13|5 pages

‘Arctic ethno-ecology’

Environmentalist debates in the Soviet North 1

chapter 14|24 pages

Landscape and self-determination among the Eveny

The political environment of Siberian reindeer herders today