ABSTRACT

Ecotourism and natural resource extraction may be seen as contradictory pursuits, yet in reality they often take place side by side, sometimes even supported by the same institutions. Existing academic and policy literatures generally overlook the phenomenon of ecotourism in areas concurrently affected by extraction industries, but such a scenario is in fact increasingly common in resource-rich developing nations.

This edited volume conceptualises and empirically analyses the ‘ecotourism-extraction nexus’ within the context of broader rural and livelihood changes in the places where these activities occur. The volume’s central premise is that these seemingly contradictory activities are empirically and conceptually more alike than often imagined, and that they share common ground in ethnographic lived experiences in rural settings and broader political economic structures of power and control.

The book offers theoretical reflections on why ecotourism and natural resource extraction are systematically decoupled, and epistemologically and analytically re-links them through ethnographic case studies drawing on research from around the world. It should be of interest to students and professionals engaged in the disciplines of geography, anthropology and development studies.

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction

The ecotourism-extraction nexus

chapter 3|20 pages

Gems of Ankarana

The commodification and generification of Madagascar's natural wonders

chapter 4|14 pages

‘Horticulture in harmony with wildlife'

The awkward marriage of ecotourism and industrial foriculture in Naivasha Kenya

chapter 5|19 pages

Between the cattle and the deep blue sea

The Janus face of the ecotourism-extraction nexus in Costa Rica

chapter 6|22 pages

Mother Nature's Best Kept Secret?

Exploring the discursive terrain and lived experience of the ecotourism-extraction nexus in Southern Belize

chapter 7|19 pages

Mining the forest

Epical and novelesque boundaries along the Upper Bulolo River, Papua New Guinea

chapter 8|20 pages

Ecological tourism and elite minerals in Karelia

The Veps' experience with extraction, commodification, and circulation of natural resources

chapter 9|22 pages

Crude desires and ‘green' initiatives

Indigenous development and oil extraction in Amazonian Ecuador

chapter 10|22 pages

‘Greening' dispossession

Mining nature through ecotourism in the Dominican Southwest 1

chapter 11|22 pages

Ecotourism and extraction in Saami lands

Contradictions and continuities

chapter 12|21 pages

Local sovereignty in the context of the extraction-ecotourism nexus in Northwest Ecuador

Post-neoliberal vignettes from Intag-Manduriacos cloud forests

chapter 13|19 pages

‘Ecotourism, not mining, in Palawan!' 1

Territorial narratives on the last frontier (Palawan, the Philippines)