“…In 1990, just after defeating the Sandinistas in a democratic election, President Violeta Chamorro established the Bosawas reserve, funded in large part by the Nature Conservancy and the World Bank. Although new civil laws enhanced regional governments' rights to regulate natural resources and recognized indigenous people's right to the territories they traditionally occupied, the Chamorro government made the Bosawas decision unilaterally (Gordon, Gurdian, and Hale 2003;Kaimowitz, Faune, and Mendoza 2003). Regional governments and local communities ''were informed after the fact that they now lived within or near a 'national' reserve, moreover a reserve that began with restrictive land-use policies that were poorly thought out, poorly communicated, and totally unenforced'' (Stocks 1995:14).…”