ISBN-13: 9783030822217 / Angielski / Twarda / 2021 / 319 str.
ISBN-13: 9783030822217 / Angielski / Twarda / 2021 / 319 str.
AUTHORS
AFFILIATION
TITLE
TOPICS/
ISSUES1
Michael K. McCall;
Brian Napoletano;
Tyanif Rico;
Andrew Boni
UNAM,
Univ. Guanajuato
Territory is simultaneously slippery and sticky - but it has a grounding in Latin America
Introduction & Guide to the Book
2
Peter H. Herlihy; Taylor Tappan;
M.L. Fahrenbruch
University of Kansas
Recognizing Indigenous Territorial Jurisdictions in Central America;
Overview indigenous territory status in Central America
Territorial jurisdictions, & governance,
3
Daniela López;
Pedro Urquijo;Gerardo Bocco
UNAM – UDIR and CIGA
Memory and Roots in La Niña, a Small Rural Town in Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. A Cultural Geographical Analysis.
Views of territory in small urban settlement. Perception, identity, memory
4
Adrián Ortega-Iturriaga;
Tzitzi Sharhí Delgado;
UNAM
UMSNH
Asymmetric Landscapes: Power as a set of chisels shaping Rural Mexico.Rural mestizo community. NRM. Landscapes, Local spatial knowledge, perceptions. Power, social relations.
5
Carlos Dobler-Morales;
Rinku Roy Chowdhury;Birgit Schmook
Clark University
Between Subsidies and Parks: Smallholder Farming Responses to Agrarian and Conservation Policy in Calakmul, Mexico.
Rural mestizo community, Smallholder agric. change. Public policy.6
Nora Sylvander
Ohio State University
"They don’t care about the environment:” Environmental Conservation discourses and spatial legitimacy in Nicaragua’s Bosawas Biosphere Reserve,
Conflicts conservation areas & Rural indigenous & mestizo communities
7José Manuel Mojica Vélez;
Sara Barrasa
UNAM
Territory and Landscape Configuration of the Coastal Wetlands of Chiapas: La Encrucijada Biosphere Reserve, Mexico
Territory and power.
Landscapes?
Conflicts of conservation areas & rural communities.
8
Connie Paola López Gómez;
Lina María Hurtado-Gómez;Clara Inés Villegas-Palacio;
Bertha Martín-López
UNAL Colombia.Federal University Fluminense.
Leuphana Universität, Lüneburg
Beyond Gender Perceptions: ethnicity, complementarity and intersectionality applied to territorialities: Perceptions, territorial planning and ecosystem services in a Colombian case study.
Feminist geography visions of Territory & Territorialisation.
Territorial planning. Gender & intersectionality.
Ecosystem services interpretation in a landscape / territory
9.
John Kelly
University of Wisconsin- La Crosse
Village-scale Territorialities in Eastern Campeche state, Mexico.
Alternative Territories, claims to Territory.
Indigenous-mestizo-settler struggles. Forest frontier
10David Diaz Baiges;
Ana Sofía Solano Acuña
IDESPO,
Universidad Nacional de Costa Rica (UNA)
De-indianize and Build a Nation, the case of the Kunas and the Guaymí of Panama, in late 19th and first half 20th Century.
Indigenous peoples
Forest frontier
Concepts of territory
11
Maria Elisa Tosi Roquette;
Michael McCall
Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo
UNAM
Participatory Mapping of Resistance to Territorial Appropriation and De-Territorialisation – Chapada do Á and its Struggles against a Mega Steel Mill Project in Espírito Santo, Brasil.
Indigenous community contest external developments. Participatory mapping12
Andrew Boni Noguez;
M.K. McCall
Universidad de Guanajuato
UNAM
Mapping Territories, disputing landscapes: Maps and the Wirikuta/Catorce land conflict.
Mining, Indigenous territory. Territorial Conflicts in 3D.
Maps as social constructs, maps as Power.
13
Tamara Ortega Uribe
Universidad de Valparaíso
Territorial Variations in Socio-environmental Conflicts from Mining Extraction in Chile. State Response and Territorial Configuration in Three Emblematic Cases.
MiningLocal communities
Environmental damage
Policies & strategies
14
Nataly Alexandra Diaz Cruz
UNAL Colombia
The Territorialisation of the Residual Spaces of Bogotá. An analysis of the implications of Lefebvre’s Spatial Triad.
Urban / peri-urban Territories, creation & representation of subversive spaces / Territories.Conceptual, theoretical
15
Brian M. Napoletano
UNAM
Geographic Rift in the Urbanization of Morelia's Periphery
Peri-urban. Territorial Change. Structuralist framing of social contest – capital & people/communityTheoretical Conceptual
16.
Robin Larsimont
Instituto de Ciencias Humanas, Sociales y Ambientales.
Dept. Geogr
Universidad de Buenos Aires
Territorializing Space in Latin America: Processes and Perceptions in Territorial Appropriation: Land and Water Grabbing in the Oases of the Province of Mendoza (Argentina). A Territorial Eco-Genesis of Agribusiness.
Agriculture, land grabbing, agribusiness, water conflicts, wine, rural communities.
3D territories – underground water
17
Sol Pérez Jiménez
UNAM
Territorialization Processes of the transnational mining company Grupo México: Peru and Mexico.
Transnational Mining, Commercial policy & strategy interpreted into Territory
18.
Michael K. McCall:
Brian Napoletano;Andrew Boni;
Tyanif Rico
UNAM,Univ. Guanajuato
Territorializing Space in Latin America: Processes and Perceptions in Territorial Appropriation
Conclusions / Reflections/ Learnings / Challenges
Michael K. McCall: Senior researcher, Centro de Investigaciones en Geografía Ambiental, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Morelia, Mexico.
Michael McCall studied at Bristol and Northwestern universities. He worked in ITC (University of Twente) for many years, in the University of Dar es Salaam, and in Sri Lanka. He is a social geographer engaged in Mexico and Latin America and previously in Eastern & Southern Africa. His primary research and teaching experiences are in participatory cartography of rural and urban local spatial knowledge with emphases on participatory spatial planning, territoriality, community initiatives, risks and vulnerability, and environmental management.
Andrew Boni Noguez: Associate professor, División de Ingenierías, Universidad de Guanajuato, Guanajuato, Mexico.
Andrew Boni Noguez is a geographer from the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. His research has mainly focused on the geography of conflicts between communities and extractive industries and other aspects of mining in Mexico, such as mineral extraction in natural protected areas and the social implications of open pit mining. He teaches in the Geography and Geomatic Engineering programs.
Brian M. Napoletano: Assistant researcher, Centro de Investigaciones en Geografía Ambiental, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Morelia, Mexico.
Brian M. Napoletano studied biogeography at Michigan State University and Purdue University, but has since shifted his focus to the geographical dimensions of the metabolic rift, including alienation and territorial dispossession associated with capitalist urbanisation, conservation, resource extraction and other major land-change processes in the Global South. He has recently become interested in the possibilities of autogestion and successful co-revolutionary mobilisation by the world and environmental proletariat to forge a hegemonic alternative to capital’s alienated mode of social-metabolic control.Tyanif Rico-Rodríguez: Ph.D. candidate in Geography, Centro de Investigaciones en Geografía Ambiental, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Morelia, Mexico.
Tyanif Rico-Rodríguez is a sociologist with Masters’ degrees in Social Sciences and Agrarian Studies. Her research interests are in territorial conflicts, place-based strategies for territorial development and environmental governance. She is a Ph.D. candidate in Geography and her current project explores governance scenarios on local knowledge based on territorial relations of care among human and non-humans in the coffee landscapes in Nariño, Colombia.The vision of this book is to bring together examples of grounded geographic research carried out in Latin America regarding territorial processes. These encompass a range of histories, processes, strategies and mechanisms, with case studies from ten countries and many regions: struggles to reclaim indigenous lands, conflicts over land/resource/environmental services, competing land claims, urban territorial identities, state power strategies, commercial involvements and others. The case studies included in the book represent a wide diversity of theoretical and methodological framings currently deployed in Latin America to help interpret the patterns and processes through the conceptual lenses of territory, territoriality and territorialization. Interrogating the meanings of territory introduces multiple spatial, socio-cultural and political concepts including space, place and landscape, power, control and governance, and identity and gender.
1997-2024 DolnySlask.com Agencja Internetowa