La gestion et conservation de ressources naturelles de propriété collective au Mexique : fragmentation bureaucratique et articulation étatique
This article addresses the reshaping of the relationships between the Mexican state, local populations, and the different non-governmental actors, focusing on the transitions that affected environmental policies since the 1990s. The analysis takes into account the legal changes that reformed the soc...
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doaj-3489cf5d07ae460ba125c85d25bc00432020-11-25T02:01:00ZfraUniversité Paris 3Cahiers des Amériques Latines1141-71612268-42472016-12-01819311110.4000/cal.4282La gestion et conservation de ressources naturelles de propriété collective au Mexique : fragmentation bureaucratique et articulation étatiqueIngreet Juliet Cano CastellanosThis article addresses the reshaping of the relationships between the Mexican state, local populations, and the different non-governmental actors, focusing on the transitions that affected environmental policies since the 1990s. The analysis takes into account the legal changes that reformed the social property (eijidal) regime in 1992. We show how the formalization of individual and collective property rights, achieved through the implementation of the Certification Program for Ejido Rights and Land Ownership (Certificación de Derechos Ejidales y Titulación de Solares, PROCEDE), favored the proliferation of ecological conservation policies that promote community participation. These processes are evaluated in the light of the experiences of the colonizing populations in the southeast of the Lacandon Jungle, in Chiapas. The article studies the positions and strategies these populations adopted in response to governmental programs, both in the environmental and the agrarian sectors. This also allows us to understand how actions for conservation and management of common property resources in Mexico are conceived, debated and pushed forward at community level.http://journals.openedition.org/cal/4282environmentcommunityStatenature |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
fra |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ingreet Juliet Cano Castellanos |
spellingShingle |
Ingreet Juliet Cano Castellanos La gestion et conservation de ressources naturelles de propriété collective au Mexique : fragmentation bureaucratique et articulation étatique Cahiers des Amériques Latines environment community State nature |
author_facet |
Ingreet Juliet Cano Castellanos |
author_sort |
Ingreet Juliet Cano Castellanos |
title |
La gestion et conservation de ressources naturelles de propriété collective au Mexique : fragmentation bureaucratique et articulation étatique |
title_short |
La gestion et conservation de ressources naturelles de propriété collective au Mexique : fragmentation bureaucratique et articulation étatique |
title_full |
La gestion et conservation de ressources naturelles de propriété collective au Mexique : fragmentation bureaucratique et articulation étatique |
title_fullStr |
La gestion et conservation de ressources naturelles de propriété collective au Mexique : fragmentation bureaucratique et articulation étatique |
title_full_unstemmed |
La gestion et conservation de ressources naturelles de propriété collective au Mexique : fragmentation bureaucratique et articulation étatique |
title_sort |
la gestion et conservation de ressources naturelles de propriété collective au mexique : fragmentation bureaucratique et articulation étatique |
publisher |
Université Paris 3 |
series |
Cahiers des Amériques Latines |
issn |
1141-7161 2268-4247 |
publishDate |
2016-12-01 |
description |
This article addresses the reshaping of the relationships between the Mexican state, local populations, and the different non-governmental actors, focusing on the transitions that affected environmental policies since the 1990s. The analysis takes into account the legal changes that reformed the social property (eijidal) regime in 1992. We show how the formalization of individual and collective property rights, achieved through the implementation of the Certification Program for Ejido Rights and Land Ownership (Certificación de Derechos Ejidales y Titulación de Solares, PROCEDE), favored the proliferation of ecological conservation policies that promote community participation. These processes are evaluated in the light of the experiences of the colonizing populations in the southeast of the Lacandon Jungle, in Chiapas. The article studies the positions and strategies these populations adopted in response to governmental programs, both in the environmental and the agrarian sectors. This also allows us to understand how actions for conservation and management of common property resources in Mexico are conceived, debated and pushed forward at community level. |
topic |
environment community State nature |
url |
http://journals.openedition.org/cal/4282 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT ingreetjulietcanocastellanos lagestionetconservationderessourcesnaturellesdeproprietecollectiveaumexiquefragmentationbureaucratiqueetarticulationetatique |
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