Statelessness and Conservation: Exploring the Implications of an International Governance Agenda
The world’s remaining biodiversity-rich regions are often located in borderlands or physically remote areas which are frequently also inhabited by stateless peoples, who are then subjected to policies expressly designed to exclude or restrict local livelihood activities. This situation has been exac...
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doaj-1e30f0ad94d84cd8859a250ce0d43d442020-11-25T00:29:27ZengUbiquity PressTilburg Law Review2211-25452014-01-01191-2818910.1163/22112596-0190200951Statelessness and Conservation: Exploring the Implications of an International Governance AgendaJulian Clifton0Greg Acciaioli1Helen Brunt2Wolfram Dressler3Michael Fabinyi4Sarinda Singh5Assistant Professor, School of Earth and Environment and The Oceans Institute, University of Western AustraliaAssistant Professor, Department of Anthropology and Sociology University of Western AustraliaPostgraduate Researcher, Institute of Development Studies University of SussexAssociate Professor, Department of Forest and Nature Conservation Policy Wageningen UniversityResearch Fellow, Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook UniversityPostdoctoral Fellow in Anthropology, University of QueenslandThe world’s remaining biodiversity-rich regions are often located in borderlands or physically remote areas which are frequently also inhabited by stateless peoples, who are then subjected to policies expressly designed to exclude or restrict local livelihood activities. This situation has been exacerbated by the tendency for international non-governmental organisations to join forces with the State to promote their conservation agenda. Whilst the political and environmental implications of this trend have been explored within the academic literature, the consequences for the survival of disempowered and marginalised stateless communities have received little attention. This article will focus upon stateless peoples enmeshed within a policy framework influenced by globalised environmental priorities and directed by international conservation NGOs in South-East Asia. It will explore how stateless peoples’ capacities are undermined by models of ‘participation’ used by these actors and underline the importance of recognising stateless peoples’ rights and responsibilities in marine natural resource management.https://tilburglawreview.com/articles/57statelessBajauSabahconservationgovernance |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Julian Clifton Greg Acciaioli Helen Brunt Wolfram Dressler Michael Fabinyi Sarinda Singh |
spellingShingle |
Julian Clifton Greg Acciaioli Helen Brunt Wolfram Dressler Michael Fabinyi Sarinda Singh Statelessness and Conservation: Exploring the Implications of an International Governance Agenda Tilburg Law Review stateless Bajau Sabah conservation governance |
author_facet |
Julian Clifton Greg Acciaioli Helen Brunt Wolfram Dressler Michael Fabinyi Sarinda Singh |
author_sort |
Julian Clifton |
title |
Statelessness and Conservation: Exploring the Implications of an International Governance Agenda |
title_short |
Statelessness and Conservation: Exploring the Implications of an International Governance Agenda |
title_full |
Statelessness and Conservation: Exploring the Implications of an International Governance Agenda |
title_fullStr |
Statelessness and Conservation: Exploring the Implications of an International Governance Agenda |
title_full_unstemmed |
Statelessness and Conservation: Exploring the Implications of an International Governance Agenda |
title_sort |
statelessness and conservation: exploring the implications of an international governance agenda |
publisher |
Ubiquity Press |
series |
Tilburg Law Review |
issn |
2211-2545 |
publishDate |
2014-01-01 |
description |
The world’s remaining biodiversity-rich regions are often located in borderlands or physically remote areas which are frequently also inhabited by stateless peoples, who are then subjected to policies expressly designed to exclude or restrict local livelihood activities. This situation has been exacerbated by the tendency for international non-governmental organisations to join forces with the State to promote their conservation agenda. Whilst the political and environmental implications of this trend have been explored within the academic literature, the consequences for the survival of disempowered and marginalised stateless communities have received little attention. This article will focus upon stateless peoples enmeshed within a policy framework influenced by globalised environmental priorities and directed by international conservation NGOs in South-East Asia. It will explore how stateless peoples’ capacities are undermined by models of ‘participation’ used by these actors and underline the importance of recognising stateless peoples’ rights and responsibilities in marine natural resource management. |
topic |
stateless Bajau Sabah conservation governance |
url |
https://tilburglawreview.com/articles/57 |
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