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Subverting regulatory protection of ‘natural commodities’: the Prunus africana in Madagascar

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Subverting regulatory protection of ‘natural commodities’: the Prunus africana in Madagascar. / Neimark, Benjamin.
In: Development and Change, Vol. 41, No. 5, 09.2010, p. 929-954.

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Neimark B. Subverting regulatory protection of ‘natural commodities’: the Prunus africana in Madagascar. Development and Change. 2010 Sept;41(5):929-954. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-7660.2010.01666.x

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Bibtex

@article{766fae67009847c89cdc99bf97a17716,
title = "Subverting regulatory protection of {\textquoteleft}natural commodities{\textquoteright}: the Prunus africana in Madagascar",
abstract = "This article explores the contradictions that have emerged along the commodity chain of the endangered medicinal tree Prunus africana in Madagascar. The study provides a unique opportunity to build on theories of access, highlighting in particular the themes of social relations, culture and power in mediating access to natural resources and benefits that derive from commercialization. Commodity chain analysis is employed to illustrate that property rights, based solely on formal rights, legal claims or customary rights to {\textquoteleft}natural commodities{\textquoteright} are insufficient to measure who is able to gain and maintain access to the species. The results show that power, regulation and exclusion have a much greater impact on who is able to tap into the benefits of P. africana commercialization. This article illustrates how extraction firms in Madagascar have over the years finessed their way, through {\textquoteleft}green conditionalities{\textquoteright} or conservation concessions, into continued extraction of P. africana — all in the face of widespread regulation",
author = "Benjamin Neimark",
year = "2010",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1111/j.1467-7660.2010.01666.x",
language = "English",
volume = "41",
pages = "929--954",
journal = "Development and Change",
issn = "0012-155X",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Subverting regulatory protection of ‘natural commodities’

T2 - the Prunus africana in Madagascar

AU - Neimark, Benjamin

PY - 2010/9

Y1 - 2010/9

N2 - This article explores the contradictions that have emerged along the commodity chain of the endangered medicinal tree Prunus africana in Madagascar. The study provides a unique opportunity to build on theories of access, highlighting in particular the themes of social relations, culture and power in mediating access to natural resources and benefits that derive from commercialization. Commodity chain analysis is employed to illustrate that property rights, based solely on formal rights, legal claims or customary rights to ‘natural commodities’ are insufficient to measure who is able to gain and maintain access to the species. The results show that power, regulation and exclusion have a much greater impact on who is able to tap into the benefits of P. africana commercialization. This article illustrates how extraction firms in Madagascar have over the years finessed their way, through ‘green conditionalities’ or conservation concessions, into continued extraction of P. africana — all in the face of widespread regulation

AB - This article explores the contradictions that have emerged along the commodity chain of the endangered medicinal tree Prunus africana in Madagascar. The study provides a unique opportunity to build on theories of access, highlighting in particular the themes of social relations, culture and power in mediating access to natural resources and benefits that derive from commercialization. Commodity chain analysis is employed to illustrate that property rights, based solely on formal rights, legal claims or customary rights to ‘natural commodities’ are insufficient to measure who is able to gain and maintain access to the species. The results show that power, regulation and exclusion have a much greater impact on who is able to tap into the benefits of P. africana commercialization. This article illustrates how extraction firms in Madagascar have over the years finessed their way, through ‘green conditionalities’ or conservation concessions, into continued extraction of P. africana — all in the face of widespread regulation

U2 - 10.1111/j.1467-7660.2010.01666.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1467-7660.2010.01666.x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 41

SP - 929

EP - 954

JO - Development and Change

JF - Development and Change

SN - 0012-155X

IS - 5

ER -