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From colonial forestry to 'community-based fire management': the political ecology of fire in Belize's coastal savannas, 1920 to present
Author(s) -
Cathy Smith
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of political ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.899
H-Index - 23
ISSN - 1073-0451
DOI - 10.2458/jpe.2989
Subject(s) - context (archaeology) , politics , incentive , colonialism , prescribed burn , geography , fire ecology , political ecology , ecology , fire protection , population , pine barrens , environmental resource management , political science , environmental planning , sociology , archaeology , forestry , engineering , ecosystem , law , civil engineering , demography , environmental science , economics , biology , microeconomics
This article examines the past century of fire management of the coastal pine savanna in Belize, drawing on archival evidence,interviews, and ethnographic enquiry into an international development project in Belize. It considers contemporary approaches that seek to use prescribed fire with the participation of local communities in relation to past practices. The Belizean savanna has long been shaped by human fire use. Its flora is ecologically adapted to fire. Yet fire has been repeatedly cast as a problem, from c. 1920, by British colonial and, later, USA foresters, and, most recently, by international and local non-governmental nature conservation organizations. Informed by different schools of thought, each of these organizations has designed programs of fire management aiming to reduce wildfire frequency. Yet little has changed; Belize's diverse and growing rural population has continued to use fire, and the savannas burn, year upon year. While the planned aims and methods differed, each program of fire management has, in practice, been similarly structured and constrained by its genesis within colonial or international development. Funding and leadership for fire management has been inconsistent. Each program has been shaped by a specifically Belizean ecology and politics, in excess of its definition of the fire 'problem' and 'solutions' to it. Powerful political elites and fire users in Belize have not seen clear incentives for the fire management supported by official policy. This analysis highlights that contemporary efforts to build more ecologically and environmentally just forms of fire management must be understood in the context of broader political struggles over land and resources.

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