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Articles – Artikler

Building a bioregion through transboundary conservation in Central America

Pages 265-276
Received 10 Jun 2014
Accepted 20 Apr 2015
Published online: 29 Oct 2015
 

Barquet, K. 2015. Building a bioregion through transboundary conservation in Central America. Norsk Geografisk TidsskriftNorwegian Journal of Geography. Vol. 69, 265–276. ISSN 0029-1951.

Proponents of transboundary conservation argue for the formation of a bioregional scale of governance. How such rescaling should be done remains an undiscussed issue. Through a study of the Mesoamerican Biological Corridor in Central America and Si-A-Paz, a transboundary protected area in Nicaragua and Costa Rica, the author investigates how a transboundary scale of conservation is enacted. The study shows that in order to meet the conditions of a bioregion, actors involved in transboundary conservation in Central America produced accounts of social and ecological integrity that did not entirely match local narratives. Moreover, transboundary conservation provided actors with increased mobility across governance scales and sources of funding. In turn, this scalar mobility enhanced the power of already powerful actors in the area, helped states to attract international sources of funding, and empowered previously marginalized local groups at the expense of others. The author concludes that actors involved in transboundary conservation attempt to create new meanings of nature and understandings of society in order to produce a new scale of conservation. However, the study highlights the problems of matching discourses of nature to accounts of social unity, and underlines the political nature of scalar projects.

Acknowledgements

I thank Anja Nygren, Maano Ramutsindela, Michael Jones, Thomas Lundén, Haakon Lein, Florencia Quesada, and the participants of the session ‘The Governance of Territories in Latin America’, held at the Nordic Latin American Research Network Conference in Oslo 2013, for their useful comments on previous versions of this article. I also thank the anonymous reviewers for contributing to the development of this article. The study was conducted as part of an NTNU Research Fellowship programme.

 

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