Governing Ancestral Land in Madagascar: Have Policy Reforms Contributed to Social Justice?

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Standard Standard

Governing Ancestral Land in Madagascar: Have Policy Reforms Contributed to Social Justice? / Andriamarovololona, M.M.; Ferguson, B.; Gardner, C.J. et al.
Governance for Justice and Environmental Sustainability: Lessons across Natural Resource Sectors in Sub-Saharan Africa. 2014. ed. Routledge, 2014. p. 63-93.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

HarvardHarvard

Andriamarovololona, MM, Ferguson, B, Gardner, CJ, Andriamarovolonona, MM, Healy, T, Muttenzer, F, Smith, SM, Hockley, N, Gingembre, M, Sowman, M (ed.) & Wynberg, R (ed.) 2014, Governing Ancestral Land in Madagascar: Have Policy Reforms Contributed to Social Justice? in Governance for Justice and Environmental Sustainability: Lessons across Natural Resource Sectors in Sub-Saharan Africa. 2014 edn, Routledge, pp. 63-93.

APA

Andriamarovololona, M. M., Ferguson, B., Gardner, C. J., Andriamarovolonona, M. M., Healy, T., Muttenzer, F., Smith, S. M., Hockley, N., Gingembre, M., Sowman, M. (Ed.), & Wynberg, R. (Ed.) (2014). Governing Ancestral Land in Madagascar: Have Policy Reforms Contributed to Social Justice? In Governance for Justice and Environmental Sustainability: Lessons across Natural Resource Sectors in Sub-Saharan Africa (2014 ed., pp. 63-93). Routledge.

CBE

Andriamarovololona MM, Ferguson B, Gardner CJ, Andriamarovolonona MM, Healy T, Muttenzer F, Smith SM, Hockley N, Gingembre M, Sowman M, ed., et al. 2014. Governing Ancestral Land in Madagascar: Have Policy Reforms Contributed to Social Justice?. In Governance for Justice and Environmental Sustainability: Lessons across Natural Resource Sectors in Sub-Saharan Africa. 2014 ed. Routledge. pp. 63-93.

MLA

Andriamarovololona, M.M. et al. "Governing Ancestral Land in Madagascar: Have Policy Reforms Contributed to Social Justice?". Governance for Justice and Environmental Sustainability: Lessons across Natural Resource Sectors in Sub-Saharan Africa. 2014 udg., Routledge. 2014, 63-93.

VancouverVancouver

Andriamarovololona MM, Ferguson B, Gardner CJ, Andriamarovolonona MM, Healy T, Muttenzer F et al. Governing Ancestral Land in Madagascar: Have Policy Reforms Contributed to Social Justice? In Governance for Justice and Environmental Sustainability: Lessons across Natural Resource Sectors in Sub-Saharan Africa. 2014 ed. Routledge. 2014. p. 63-93

Author

Andriamarovololona, M.M. ; Ferguson, B. ; Gardner, C.J. et al. / Governing Ancestral Land in Madagascar: Have Policy Reforms Contributed to Social Justice?. Governance for Justice and Environmental Sustainability: Lessons across Natural Resource Sectors in Sub-Saharan Africa. 2014. ed. Routledge, 2014. pp. 63-93

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Governing Ancestral Land in Madagascar: Have Policy Reforms Contributed to Social Justice?

AU - Andriamarovololona, M.M.

AU - Ferguson, B.

AU - Gardner, C.J.

AU - Andriamarovolonona, M.M.

AU - Healy, T.

AU - Muttenzer, F.

AU - Smith, S.M.

AU - Hockley, N.

AU - Gingembre, M.

A2 - Sowman, M.

A2 - Wynberg, R.

PY - 2014/2/11

Y1 - 2014/2/11

N2 - Since the 1980s Madagascar has experienced increasing international attention promoting conservation and development, attracted by its biodiversity hotspot status. The island has consequently been a testing ground for new approaches to environmental governance including integrated conservation and development projects, community-based natural resource management, new generation co-managed, multiple-use protected areas and the commoditisation of forests and biodiversity through reduced emissions from deforestation and degradation and schemes implementing mining biodiversity offsets. In addition, the liberalisation of economic policies has led to internationally funded agricultural development projects, large-scale land acquisitions for food and biofuel production by foreign corporations and governments, and globally significant mining investments. Policy reforms developed alongside these interventions and were characterised by approaches purportedly designed to improve social and environmental outcomes for the Malagasy people through more participatory forms of governance, which promised greater equity and sustainability. The functional effectiveness, transparency and social justice impacts of new governance approaches and their related environmental and social regulations vary widely, however. This chapter applies a common focus on participation and social justice to case studies of four sectors: agriculture, mining, forests and protected areas. In doing so, we highlight a ‘participation gap’ between intentions and practice with serious implications for social justice, and reflect on what has, and has not, been learned over three decades of environmental governance reforms.

AB - Since the 1980s Madagascar has experienced increasing international attention promoting conservation and development, attracted by its biodiversity hotspot status. The island has consequently been a testing ground for new approaches to environmental governance including integrated conservation and development projects, community-based natural resource management, new generation co-managed, multiple-use protected areas and the commoditisation of forests and biodiversity through reduced emissions from deforestation and degradation and schemes implementing mining biodiversity offsets. In addition, the liberalisation of economic policies has led to internationally funded agricultural development projects, large-scale land acquisitions for food and biofuel production by foreign corporations and governments, and globally significant mining investments. Policy reforms developed alongside these interventions and were characterised by approaches purportedly designed to improve social and environmental outcomes for the Malagasy people through more participatory forms of governance, which promised greater equity and sustainability. The functional effectiveness, transparency and social justice impacts of new governance approaches and their related environmental and social regulations vary widely, however. This chapter applies a common focus on participation and social justice to case studies of four sectors: agriculture, mining, forests and protected areas. In doing so, we highlight a ‘participation gap’ between intentions and practice with serious implications for social justice, and reflect on what has, and has not, been learned over three decades of environmental governance reforms.

M3 - Chapter

SN - 978-0415523592

SP - 63

EP - 93

BT - Governance for Justice and Environmental Sustainability: Lessons across Natural Resource Sectors in Sub-Saharan Africa

PB - Routledge

ER -