Contents
Territorialisation
and the Politics of Highland Landscapes in Vietnam: Negotiating
Property Relations in Policy, Meaning and Practice
Jennifer C. Sowerwine
This
article examines the making of post-socialist forest property relations
in highland Vietnam in policy, meaning and practice, and the resultant
implications for patterns of resource use, local power relations,
and forest biodiversity and cover. It utilises the framework of
political ecology to explore how macro-level institutions and ideologies
intersect with local understandings and practices to regulate resource
access, use and control. Specifically, this article examines changes
in farmers'de facto and de jure rights in land and land-based capital
in response to institutional and market changes, and the micro-processes
through which those relations are constituted and contested. It
explores how forest lands are imagined by the state and made legible
through various mechanisms of surveying, classifying, mapping and
registering forest land parcels, a set of processes defined as territorialisation.
It extends the analysis beyond the nation-state, demonstrating the
role of international environmental capital in facilitating those
processes. State territoriality, however, has not resulted in the
uniform transformation of forest property arrangements into private
control. Rather, existing social structures, land use practices
and social(ist) networks may in fact alter or subvert forestry reforms
in ways not envisaged by the state. This article explores the particularities
and unintended consequences of forest reforms through a comparison
of two highland Dao villages in northern Vietnam at the turn of
the millennium.
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