The Maya Forest Waterlands
Shared Conservation, Entangled Politics, and Fluid Borders
Author(s)
Laako, Hanna
Kauffer, Edith
Language
EnglishAbstract
This book examines the entanglements and blurred edges of nature conservation and geopolitical relations in the borderlands of the trinational Maya Forest. Maya Forest is an umbrella term for transboundary conservation developed by scientists and conservationists in the 1990s to protect the threatened rainforest in the borderlands of Mexico, Belize, and Guatemala. Currently, the Maya Forest is a biodiversity hotspot composed of a network of protected areas and heritage sites. However, issues related to water, land, and forests have often been treated as separate political units, and not as part of the same history. Written by two authors with decades of hands-on experience in this region, this book sheds light on the complex dynamics by which conservation and natural resource management geopolitically shape borderlands such as the Maya Forest. The book introduces the novel concept of forest waterlands as borderlands and fluid edges, which are now subject to concern by conservationists. These are entangled spaces in which conservation, peoples, and politics interact, connect, and disconnect with the nexus of waters, forests, and lands. The book sheds light on the building and mapping of the Maya Forest ecoregion, with particular attention to water as an often neglected, but unifying element. It showcases how the Maya Forest is a distinct region characterized by transformations entangled with the Maya, trails of biological stations, the shared history of chicleros (chewing-gum hunters), fluid international rivers and transboundary basins, and various geopolitical discrepancies. It offers a contemporary glimpse into the Maya Forest’s intertwined bio- and geopolitics, which urge us to rethink borders and boundaries. This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of nature conservation, global environmental politics, geopolitics, borderlands, international relations, and natural resource management.
Keywords
Borderlands; Geopolitics; Transboundary Conservation; Indigenous Peoples; Transboundary River Basin; Rainforest; Global Environmental Politics; Mexico; Belize; GuatemalaDOI
10.4324/9781003429050ISBN
9781040309032, 9781003429050, 9781040309070, 9781032549309, 9781040309032Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
Oxford, 2025Imprint
RoutledgeSeries
Routledge Studies in Conservation and the Environment,Classification
Biodiversity
Human geography
Environmental management
Regional / International studies
Ethnic studies
Development studies
Conservation of the environment
Environmental policy and protocols
Social impact of environmental issues
Physical geography and topography
Politics and government