Kathleen D. Morrison and Mark T. Lycett
- Published in print:
- 2014
- Published Online:
- September 2014
- ISBN:
- 9780226322667
- eISBN:
- 9780226024134
- Item type:
- chapter
- Publisher:
- University of Chicago Press
- DOI:
- 10.7208/chicago/9780226024134.003.0013
- Subject:
- Biology, Biodiversity / Conservation Biology
Conservation and development terminology often perpetuates an overly simplistic view of human–forest interactions. In applying labels such as biodiversity hotspot and contrasting pristine or primary ...
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Conservation and development terminology often perpetuates an overly simplistic view of human–forest interactions. In applying labels such as biodiversity hotspot and contrasting pristine or primary forests with so-called secondary forests, conservation literature creates false narratives of complex, socionatural forest histories. This chapter employs archaeological, historical, and paleoenvironmental data to explore the Western Ghats of southern India as an example of a region that has been presented as a fragile remnant of pristine, “intact” forest, when the region, in reality, is just as much a product of dynamic historical phenomena as regions throughout India that have been labelled secondary forest. Although forest anthropogenesis may be more obvious in some areas than in others, as this case study illustrates, forest history and human history are linked processes best viewed as socionatural phenomena.Less
Conservation and development terminology often perpetuates an overly simplistic view of human–forest interactions. In applying labels such as biodiversity hotspot and contrasting pristine or primary forests with so-called secondary forests, conservation literature creates false narratives of complex, socionatural forest histories. This chapter employs archaeological, historical, and paleoenvironmental data to explore the Western Ghats of southern India as an example of a region that has been presented as a fragile remnant of pristine, “intact” forest, when the region, in reality, is just as much a product of dynamic historical phenomena as regions throughout India that have been labelled secondary forest. Although forest anthropogenesis may be more obvious in some areas than in others, as this case study illustrates, forest history and human history are linked processes best viewed as socionatural phenomena.