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@article{ MacDonald2005,
 title = {Global hunting grounds: power, scale and ecology in the negotiation of conservation},
 author = {MacDonald, Kenneth Iain},
 journal = {Cultural Geographies},
 number = {3},
 pages = {259-291},
 volume = {12},
 year = {2005},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1191/1474474005eu330oa},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-232424},
 abstract = {Increasingly, large international conservation organizations have come to rely upon                market-oriented interventions, such as sport trophy hunting, to achieve multiple                goals of biodiversity protection and ‘development’. Such                initiatives apply an understanding of ‘nature’-defined through                an emerging discourse of global ecology-to incorporate local ecologies within the                material organizational sphere of capital and transnational institutions, generating                new forms of governmentality at scales inaccessible to traditional means of                discipline such as legislation and enforcement. In this paper, I historicize debates                over ‘nature’ in a region of northern Pakistan, and demonstrate                how local ecologies are becoming subject to transnational institutional agents                through strategies similar to those used by colonial administrators to gain                ecological control over their ‘dominions’. This contemporary                reworking of a colonialist ethic of conservation relies rhetorically on a discourse                of global ecology, and on ideological representations of a resident population as                incapable environmental managers, to assert and implement an allegedly                scientifically and ethically superior force better able to respond to assumed                degradation. In undertaking such disciplinary projects, international conservation                organizations rely on, and produce, a representation of ecological space as                ‘global’ to facilitate the attainment of translocal                political-ecological goals.},
}