Article ID: | iaor20122135 |
Volume: | 16 |
Issue: | 1-2 |
Start Page Number: | 65 |
End Page Number: | 70 |
Publication Date: | Mar 2012 |
Journal: | Forest Policy and Economics |
Authors: | de Jong Wil, Ruiz Sergio A |
Keywords: | behaviour |
This paper analyses the movement and settlement of Brazilian citizens in Bolivia's tropical forests to explore theoretical frameworks of forest policy analysis in forested borderlands. While unauthorized cross‐border interactions in tropical forest regions are quite common, the implications for forest policies have been explored very little. This paper uses territorialisation theory to explore the presence of illegal immigrants in tropical forest borderlands and links these theories to forest policies. In the northern Bolivian Amazon, borderland territorialisation efforts become quickly enmeshed in political struggles that extended beyond the border region. When this happened, forest policy and administration become entangled in struggles for control not only over the forests and borders, but by the efforts of political parties for national control. The importance of territorialisation concepts and related theoretical principles, therefore, demonstrates that a forest policy analysis approach in tropical forest borderlands that does not include these concepts may be too limited to analyse or explain efforts of government actors and local stakeholders in the forestry sectors. Understanding forestry policies and administration in remote, inaccessible and poorly controlled forest borderlands may require not only framing the discussion within the conventional theories that are typically used in forest policy analysis, but also applying territorialisation theory and other relevant theories.