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Title: Producing Wildlife: The
Unanticipated Natures of Conservation in India
Where
& When: October 03, 2007
341 Eggers Hall
4 pm
Type
of Activity: Speaker
Speaking: Paul
Robbins, Associate Professor of Geography and Regional
Development at the University of Arizona
Summary:
As police-like enclosures have given way to participatory
management in India only to be supplanted by a return to
fortress conservation, the practical problem of making
wildlife conservation work has only become more muddled. Can
chaotic, semi-humanized environments be controlled to
protect rare endemic wildlife? Reviewing current
interdisciplinary research at the Kumbhalgarh Wildlife
Reserve in Rajasthan, preliminary findings suggest that many
wildlife species - those adapted to rule-breaking and
illegal grazing, including wolves, panthers, langur monkeys,
and sloth bear - have managed to survive and thrive, while
others have declined. So too, while invasive species have
harmed habitats for many species, they have allowed the
survival of others. Finally, while the costs of adjacency to
reserves has been high for many local households, it has
been a boon for others. These outcomes have not been a
result of planned or controlled management, but instead of a
self-organizing pattern that emerges in the daily struggle
for productive resources. This suggests that while wildlife
species cannot be preserved by even the most zealous
international efforts, they might instead be produced.
So too, while behaviors of local people cannot be controlled
by zealous conservationists, they might be accommodated
to yield surprising progress in both environment and
development.
Sponsorship:
Department of Geography; The South Asia Center