Forest Dwellers, Forest Protectors

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A01=Richard Reed
agriculture
Author_Richard Reed
Biosphere Reserve
Bitter Orange
Bitter Orange Trees
Brazil Nuts
Brazil's Northeast Coast
Brazilian Government
canopy
Category=JHM
Cavia Aperea
Cognatic Descent Groups
commercial
Commercial Agroforestry
Commercial Gathering
Cuniculus Paca
Eastern Paraguay
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic research
forest conservation policy
Forest Residents
gathering
government
Guarani kinship systems
high
indigenous
Indigenous Agroforestry
indigenous agroforestry development model
indigenous land rights
Indigenous Production Systems
Lowland Forests
Mestizo Merchant
Mestizo Settlers
Newfound Land
Older Field
Panthera Onca
paraguay
paraguayan
Paraguayan Government
people
South American Fox
sustainable livelihoods
Tapirus Terrestris
yerba mate economy
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138434431
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Jul 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The Guarani of Paraguay have survived over four centuries of contact with the commercial system, while keeping in tact their traditions of leadership, religion and kinship. This concise ethnography examines how the Guarani have adapted over time, in concert with Paraguay‘s subtropical forest system.
New To This Edition:

Expanded historical background and updated demographic information on the Guarani brings the research to the present day (Chapter 1).
Expands and strengthens the discussion of ‘sustainability to include more recent advances in the concept (Chapter 1), and introduces the idea of ‘subsidy from nature into the discussion of conventional tropical development (Chapter 3).
Develops the discussion of women‘s labor in horticulture (Chapter 3).
Analyzes the effects of indigenous mixed agro-forestry in stemming the high rates of Paraguayan deforestation of the 1990s (Chapter 4).
Discusses the recent globalization of the yerba mate market, and the economy's effecton Paraguay‘s protected areas (Chapter 4).
Describes Guarani ethnic federations as a means to engage the national and international political institutions (Chapter 4).
Explores the rapid growth in Guarani population in native communities, which results from lower infant mortality, more land pressure and more reliable census data (Chapter 4).
This brief introductory text makes the ideal supplementary text for students of anthropology.

Richard Reed is Professor of Anthropology at Trinity University, USA. He studies the effects of deforestation on indigenous groups in the forests of South America. Over the last fifteen years, he has been working with Guarani villages on the frontier of expanding colonization and agriculture in Paraguay. In two of his books, Prophets of Agroforestry (1995) and Forest Residents and Forest Managers, (1997) Reed proposes indigenous models of land use as alternative strategies for sustainable development in forested regions.

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