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Seeing the Quiet Politics in Unquiet Woods: A Different Vantage Point for a Future Forest Agenda

Seema Arora‐Jonsson, Carol J. Pierce Colfer, Marien González‐Hidalgo

2021Human Ecology12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract We address two aspects of forest lives—violence and care—that are central to forest outcomes but often invisible in mainstream discussions on forests. We argue that questions of violence and care work in forests open up debates about what forests are, who defines them, and how. We draw primarily on feminist work on forestry, violence, and care to examine the gendered nature of forest conflicts and the ‘quiet politics’ of resistance to violence grounded in the everyday work of care that are crucial to understanding forests and their governance. We show how varied practices of resistance to violence and injustice are grounded in cooperative action of care and are an intrinsic part of shaping and regenerating forests. We highlight the importance of close attention to seemingly mundane actions rooted in people’s daily lives and experiences that shape forests.

Topics & Concepts

Resistance (ecology)PoliticsMainstreamSociologyInjusticeCorporate governanceWork (physics)Environmental ethicsPolitical scienceEcologyBusinessMechanical engineeringBiologyFinanceLawPhilosophyEngineeringConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource ManagementAgriculture, Land Use, Rural DevelopmentForest Management and Policy
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