<p>
<em>“The book raises a major issue: social and environmental justice. Those who advocate protection are not those who suffer its constraints.”</em> <strong>• Steve Hagimont</strong>, 20&21. <em>Revue d'histoire</em>, n° 159, 2023</p>
<p>
<em>“The book as a whole insists on a contradiction that seems inherent to conservation: "this policy does not exist alongside destruction but with it". Highlighted by the title of the book, this contradictory association is found in two logics: protecting in order to exploit and exploiting in order to protect.”</em> <strong>• Colin Vanlaer</strong>, <em>Moussons</em>, n°41, 2023</p>

Across Africa and South-East Asia, the impulse to protect nature often dovetails with the domination of local people. From mass displacement to severe restrictions on land use and daily acts of violence, conservation work risks reproducing Eurocentric modes of colonialism and worsening the effects of the climate crisis. In this insightful and wide-ranging study of the colonial history of conservation, Tropical Nature seeks to provide a much-needed history of the Global South from its own perspective. Comparing case studies ranging from Ali Bongo’s Gabon, to the postcolonial African itinerary of the agronomist Arthur Bunting, this volume advances a “small-scale global history” that deciphers the relations binding human societies to the non-human world.

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An insightful and wide-ranging study of the colonial history of conservation projects, Tropical Nature seeks to provide a much-needed history of the Global South from its own perspective. In doing so, this volume collection spotlights a “small-scale global history” that deciphers the relations binding human societies to the non-human world.

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List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations

Introduction: Protecting Nature in Africa and Asia. Towards a Small-Scale Global History
Guillaume Blanc

Chapter 1. Laissez-Faire Conservation. Nature Protection in Colonial Vietnam
Pamela McElwee

Chapter 2. Setting up a Wildlife Department. Kenyan Expertise in Malaya
Mathieu Guérin

Chapter 3. Imperial Forests and Nature Reserves in Singapore, 1883-1959
Timothy P. Barnard

Chapter 4. Rambouillet, Agricultural Stations, and French Colonial Africa. Conserving and Improving Nature (1900-1930)
Raphaël Devred

Chapter 5. Missing Conservation? On the Puzzling Dearth of Nature Conservation in Mandate Syria and Lebanon
Diana K. Davis

Chapter 6. Between Empire and Development. The Ubiquitous Life and Career of Arthur Hugh Bunting
Joseph M. Hodge

Chapter 7. The Adamsons, Born Free, and the Late Colonial Era. Images That Helped to Change the Animal World
William Beinart

Chapter 8.Conservation in the Days of Independence. the Case of the Seychelles, 1968-1974
Grégory Quenet

Chapter 9. Tracking Wildebeests. the Technological Mediation of Spaces for Humans and Wildlife in the Serengeti since 1950
Simone Schleper

Chapter 10. Conserving Nature in Mozambique. Relaying Conservation Practices and Imaginaries since Colonial Days
Rozenn Nakanabo Diallo

Chapter 11. Catfights and Crocodile Tears. Conflict, Charismatic Species, and Nature Professionals in India’s Conservation History
Meera Anna Oommen

Chapter 12. Representing Space to Structure Time. Tropical Deforestation Fronts in the Light of Human-Territory Relations
Johan Oszwald

Conclusion: Studying Nature, Networks, and Power. What Next?
Guillaume Blanc

Index

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Mathieu Guérin is Associate Professor of Southeast Asian History at the Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales (INALCO). His research specializes in the social and economic history of Cambodia in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, focusing especially on the history of wildlife conservation since the colonial era.
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Product details

ISBN
9781805398912
Published
2025-03-01
Publisher
Berghahn Books; Berghahn Books
Height
229 mm
Width
152 mm
Age
RES, P, UP, 06, 05
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
328

Biographical note

Guillaume Blanc is Associate Professor of Contemporary History at the University of Rennes 2 and a member of the Institut Universitaire de France (2021-2026). His work focuses on the global governance of nature, with a particular concentration on Ethiopia and East Africa. He has recently published La nature des hommes (La Découverte, 2024) and The Invention of Green Colonialism (Polity, 2022).