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Journal Article

Citation

Stearman AML. Hum. Nat. 1994; 5(4): 339-357.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1994, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/BF02734165

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Professional and popular publications have increasingly depicted native peoples of Amazonia as "natural" conservationists or as people with an innate "conservation ethic." A few classic examples are cited repeatedly to advance this argument with the result that these cases tend to be generalized to all indigenous peoples. This paper explores the premise that many of these systems of resource conservation come from areas of Amazonia where human survival depends on careful management of the subsistence base and not from a culturally imbedded "conservation ethic." Where resource constraints do not pertain, as in the case of the Yuquí of lowland Bolivia, such patterns are unknown. Finally, the negative consequences of portraying all native peoples as natural conservationists is having some negative consequences in terms of current struggles to obtain indigenous land rights.


Language: en

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