Land Use Change and Commodity Frontiers: Perceptions, Values, and Conflicts Over the Appropriation of Nature

Publicado en Case Studies in the Environment 4 (1): 1223610.
Autores

Daniel M. Cáceres, Esteban Tapella, Diego A. Cabrol, Lucrecia Estigarribia

Año de publicación 2020
DOI https://doi.org/10.1525/cse.2020.1223610
Afiliaciones
  • Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, Facultad de Ciencias Agropecuarias, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Córdoba, Argentina
  • Instituto de Investigaciones Socioeconómicas, Universidad Nacional de San Juan, San Juan, Argentina
  • Facultad de Ciencias Agropecuarias, Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Vegetal, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, CONICET, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales, CC 495, 5000 Córdoba, Argentina
  • Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Vegetal, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, CONICET, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales, CC 495, 5000 Córdoba, Argentina.
     
Programa
  • Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas,
  • Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Universidad Nacional de San Juan
  • Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research.
Proyecto SGP-HW090
Keywords
PDFLand Use Change and Commodity Frontiers Perceptions Values and Conflicts Over the Appropriation of Nature.pdf

Abstract

Argentina is experiencing an expansion of soya and maize cultivation that is pushing the agricultural frontier over areas formerly occupied by native Chaco forest. Subsistance farmers use this dry forest to raise goats and cattle and to obtain a broad range of goods and services. Thus, two very different and non-compatible land uses are in dispute. On the one hand subsistance farmers fostering an extensive and diversified forest use, on the other hand, large-scale producers who need to clear out the forest to sow annual crops in order to appropriate soil fertility. First, the paper looks at how these social actors perceive Chaco forest, what their interests are, and what kind of values they attach to it. Second, we analyze the social-environmental conflicts that arise among actors in order to appropriate forest&rsquos benefits. Special attention is paid to the role played by the government in relation to: (a) how does it respond to the demands of the different sectors and (b) how it deals with the management recommendations produced by scientists carrying out social and ecological research. To put these ideas at test we focus on a case study located in Western Córdoba (Argentina), where industrial agriculture is expanding at a fast pace, and where social actors&rsquo interests are generating a series of disputes and conflicts. Drawing upon field work, the paper shows how power alliances between economic and political powers, use the institutional framework of the State in their own benefit, disregarding wider environmental and social costs.