2019
DOI: 10.1111/geoj.12293
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Firing up: Policy, politics and polemics under new and old burning regimes

Abstract: Changing fire regimes in the context of climate change call for new understandings of their diversity, use, policies, practices and politics. While catastrophic fires are redoubling calls for suppression, new political ecologies debate fire prohibition politics and emphasise understanding and incorporating local knowledge into management decisions. Latin American countries are characterised by strong regional tensions associated with environmental policies, agriculture and infrastructure development that often… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 47 publications
(55 reference statements)
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“…Anti-swidden narratives and burdens of blame have intensified as of late (Tacconi, 2016;Carmenta et al, 2019). As global climate change mitigation and biodiversity conservation measures aim to enhance forest cover (e.g., natural climate solutions, or REDD+) as forest conversion and climate change causes forests to dry out and become more susceptible to fire, the criminal nature of swidden clearing and burning is assumed a priori and considered a direct threat to green governance agendas (Dressler et al, 2018;Fletcher et al, 2018;Eloy et al, 2019). Swidden farmers now bear a mounting burden of 'fire risk' in increasingly flammable forest landscapes (e.g., drying out due to the greater prevalence of drought etc (see Smith 2018;Carmenta et al, in review;Eloy et al, 2019)) and are typically blamed when escape fires occur, irrespective of how close the fire is to where they reside (Carmenta et al, 2019).…”
Section: Recalibrating the 'Burden Of Blame': Valuing Indigenous Cleamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Anti-swidden narratives and burdens of blame have intensified as of late (Tacconi, 2016;Carmenta et al, 2019). As global climate change mitigation and biodiversity conservation measures aim to enhance forest cover (e.g., natural climate solutions, or REDD+) as forest conversion and climate change causes forests to dry out and become more susceptible to fire, the criminal nature of swidden clearing and burning is assumed a priori and considered a direct threat to green governance agendas (Dressler et al, 2018;Fletcher et al, 2018;Eloy et al, 2019). Swidden farmers now bear a mounting burden of 'fire risk' in increasingly flammable forest landscapes (e.g., drying out due to the greater prevalence of drought etc (see Smith 2018;Carmenta et al, in review;Eloy et al, 2019)) and are typically blamed when escape fires occur, irrespective of how close the fire is to where they reside (Carmenta et al, 2019).…”
Section: Recalibrating the 'Burden Of Blame': Valuing Indigenous Cleamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the problem of fire can be framed very differently: for example, ecologists may focus on maintaining biodiversity by managing the size and timing of fires in line with the needs of an ecosystem or species of interest, whereas town councils will focus on preventing damage to people and infrastructure. In response to the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement, managing land use to reduce carbon emissions or increase sequestration has become an increasingly powerful driver for many fire-related policies (Eloy et al, 2019). However, land use management decisions necessarily involve trade-offs between the aspirations of different groups of people (Mace et al, 2018).…”
Section: Fire and Policymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In these two regions, the IFM program's implementation included the professionalized indigenous brigade's training, vehicles, infrastructure, and safety equipment. The aim is to use local traditional knowledge in defining the fire regimes to be implemented [57,58].…”
Section: Study Regionmentioning
confidence: 99%