ABSTRACT

Written by leading authorities from Australasia, Europe and North America, this book examines the dynamic conflicts and synergies between nature conservation and human development in contemporary Cambodia.

After suffering conflict and stagnation in the late twentieth century, Cambodia has experienced an economic transformation in the last decade, with growth averaging almost ten per cent per year, partly through investment from China. However this rush for development has been coupled with tremendous social and environmental change which, although positive in some aspects, has led to rising inequality and profound shifts in the condition, ownership and management of natural resources. High deforestation rates, declining fish stocks, biodiversity loss, and alienation of indigenous and rural people from their land and traditional livelihoods are now matters of increasing local and international concern.

The book explores the social and political dimensions of these environmental changes in Cambodia, and of efforts to intervene in and ‘improve’ current trajectories for conservation and development. It provides a compelling analysis of the connections between nature, state and society, pointing to the key role of grassroots and non-state actors in shaping Cambodia’s frontiers of change. These insights will be of great interest to scholars of Southeast Asia and environment-development issues in general.

part 1|87 pages

Transformation, complexity and contestation in nature-society relations

chapter 3|22 pages

Lost in transition

Landscape, ecological gradients and legibility on the Tonle Sap floodplain

chapter 4|20 pages

Can market integration improve livelihoods and safeguard the environment?

The case of hybrid rice varieties in Cambodia's agricultural heartland

chapter 5|25 pages

Land is life

An analysis of the role ‘grand corruption' plays in enabling elite grabbing of land in Cambodia

chapter 6|19 pages

Contested development and environment

Chinese-backed hydropower and infrastructure projects in Cambodia

part 2|61 pages

Interventions in natural resource management

chapter 7|19 pages

Managing protected areas in Cambodia

The challenge for conservation bureaucracies in a hostile governance environment

chapter 8|17 pages

In whose name and in whose interests?

An actor-oriented analysis ofcommunity forestry in Bey, a Khmer village in Northeast Cambodia

part 3|78 pages

Social movements and radical responses to transformation

chapter 10|19 pages

What about the ‘unprotected' areas?

Building on traditional forms of ownership and land use fordealing with new contexts

chapter 13|22 pages

Story-telling and social change

A case study of the PreyLang Community Network