2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.polgeo.2018.12.003
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Forest management in Bolivia under Evo Morales: The challenges of post-neoliberalism

Abstract: Based on a study of the forest sector in the northern Amazon region of Bolivia, this paper addresses the reasons why the Bolivian so-called "postneoliberal" project is an adjustment of neoliberalism rather than a departure from it. First, Bolivia has aimed not so much at breaking away radically from neoliberal frameworks as at reasserting the importance of the state and of the national scale in regulatory actions. Second, the neoliberal period has left behind the insuperable legacy of a neoliberal approach to … Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 58 publications
(79 reference statements)
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“…173 Forestry practices, however, continue to echo the commercial priorities of the neoliberal era, posing a significant obstacle to the post-neoliberal vision of a more sustainable and equitable relationship with nature. 174 Agramont et al also highlight the structural challenges concerning water access in rural areas. 175…”
Section: Boliviamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…173 Forestry practices, however, continue to echo the commercial priorities of the neoliberal era, posing a significant obstacle to the post-neoliberal vision of a more sustainable and equitable relationship with nature. 174 Agramont et al also highlight the structural challenges concerning water access in rural areas. 175…”
Section: Boliviamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other scholars take a multi-scalar approach, such as Gautreau and Bruslé (2019) who argue that national forest management in Bolivia, rather than erasing the scales associated with global capitalism, made them more complex nationally, globally, and locally. The multi-scale governance created a 'pragmatic management model that combines agrarian colonization, conservation and extractivism', suggesting the resiliency of neoliberalism on space and operational scales (Gautreau and Bruslé, 2019: 119).…”
Section: Scalementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bolivia is a good example of complex interactions between climate change, policy-driven LULC, and fire. Since the turn of the century, Bolivia has experienced hotter and drier conditions along with complex, non-linear changes in land use that are uneven in space (Figure 1), and correspond to changing policies and development (Devisscher et al, 2016;Gautreau and Bruslé, 2019). Bolivia experienced severe droughts in (Lewis et al, 2011;Brando et al, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%