<p> Anthropologists know that conservation often disempowers already under-privileged groups and that it also fails to protect environments. Through a series of ethnographic studies this book argues that the real problem is not the disappearance of pristine nature or even the land-use practices of uneducated people. Rather what we know about culturally determined patterns of consumption production and unequal distribution suggests that critical attention would be better turned on discourses of primitiveness and pristine nature so prevalent within conservation ideology and on the historically formed power and exchange relationships that they help perpetuate.</p>
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