2019
DOI: 10.1590/1809-43412019v16d501
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Fire normativities: environmental conservation and quilombola forms of life in the Brazilian savanna

Abstract: The article seeks to shift away from the centrality attributed to the idea of ‘control’ in the debate on participatory fire management. To do so, it addresses three modes of existence of the phenomenon in the Brazilian savannah - queimada (burned place), fogos gerais (fire that spreads or general fires) and fogo fora do tempo (fire out of time) - aiming to explore the perceptual disparities between wanted and unwanted fires with quilombolas and environmental managers in the Jalapão region (Tocantins, Brazil). … Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 20 publications
(10 reference statements)
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“…In the Brazilian National System of Conservation Units (SNUC), ecological stations are strict preservation areas where there should be no human occupation and the human uses are expected to be restricted to research and education, closely related to the American concept of wilderness. However, before SGTES' creation, it was already the homeland of traditional communities, including quilombolas (maroon communities) who have been living with fire for centuries in quilombos (settlements historically founded by enslaved Africans) spread across the Japalão region (Fagundes, 2019b;Silva, 2019).…”
Section: Fire Suppression Periodmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In the Brazilian National System of Conservation Units (SNUC), ecological stations are strict preservation areas where there should be no human occupation and the human uses are expected to be restricted to research and education, closely related to the American concept of wilderness. However, before SGTES' creation, it was already the homeland of traditional communities, including quilombolas (maroon communities) who have been living with fire for centuries in quilombos (settlements historically founded by enslaved Africans) spread across the Japalão region (Fagundes, 2019b;Silva, 2019).…”
Section: Fire Suppression Periodmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the same year, the TC negotiation process, which started in 2009, was finally concluded, resulting in a ruled agreement that allowed the use of fire for some traditional practices such as agriculture, grazing and harvest of capim dourado (Syngonanthus nitens, Eriocaulaceae) -the golden grass, but only upon formal authorization. This agreement (TC/2012) was the first one in ICMBio to allow fire use by quilombola communities in a strict protected area (Fagundes, 2019b). Nevertheless, the TC/2012 also imposed some restrictions: late dry season fires were forbidden; the minimum fire return interval was stipulated as three years, and the use of fire in wildlands along the Novo river was also forbidden, because it is the habitat of pato-mergulhão (Mergus octosetaceus)an endangered brazilian merganser.…”
Section: Changing Fire Management Paradigmsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Offenders seek to justify their claim that it is hard to tell controlled burning apart from forest fires. But for Fagundes (2019), discriminating between excessive or abusive burning and necessary controlled burning must conform to environmental standards. This implies a normative awareness that excludes conceptual conflict because such conflict contributes to the bending of laws on the use of fire, while opening a gap for the corrupt practice of starting forest fires in the region.…”
Section: Characterization Of the Factors That Involve Fire Issues In The Western Amazonmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Foram doze meses de convivência (entre os anos de 2018 e 2020) com pescadores e caranguejeiros residentes na Área de Proteção Ambiental e na Reserva Extrativista Marinha do Delta do Parnaíba (Piauí-Maranhão). Utilizei-me desse episódio com os macacos para refletir sobre como a noção de território pode dialogar com a ideia de paisagem sonora, a fim de percebermos a relação entre os sons e diferentes formas de vida (PITROU, 2015(PITROU, , 2016FAGUNDES, 2019aFAGUNDES, , 2019b Adentrar os manguezais é não apenas se emaranhar nas densas raízes que crescem sob nossos pés, mas também se enredar nos fluxos de vida de centenas de seres SOUTO, 2004). Essas florestas úmidas aqui abordadas crescem em regiões estuarinas, sob o encontro de águas fluviais e oceânicas.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified