scholarly journals Use and abuse of the planet in non-rich regions: histories of fracking and windmills in a more than human geographical perspective

2022 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Angel Paniagua ◽  

<abstract> <p>Remote and marginal areas with scarce and vulnerable populations are "comfortable" settings and suitable places for the development of new extractive activities for energy production. Fracking and modern windmills are often controversial activities in marginal areas for native and local populations, with varying political positions from local elites. The new scalar policies associated with the energy project introduce some of the resistance strategies in the form of more than human geographies or hybrid spatial relationships that characterize recent human geography. This paper explores and suggests possible ways of integrating local interests with regional or national policies based on the "health" of marginal populations, marginal rather than human materiality's and marginal more-than-human.</p> </abstract>

2020 ◽  
Vol 63 (4) ◽  
pp. 831-857
Author(s):  
Kennedy Mkutu ◽  
Anna Mdee

AbstractFormerly marginal areas are increasingly the focus of extractive mega-projects, which are framed as necessary for economic growth and a modern industrial economy. Yet there are concerns that such projects are unjustly displacing local populations, facilitated through the alliances of local elites with foreign investors. This article asks, who are the winners and losers from oil exploration in the Turkana region of Kenya? Using longitudinal ethnographic research on the dynamics of local government, oil exploration, and pastoralist livelihoods in Turkana, Mkutu and Mdee highlight how current processes may exacerbate inequality and marginalization, with the potential for increasingly violent consequences.


Forests ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 233 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keiko Kitamura ◽  
Kentaro Uchiyama ◽  
Saneyoshi Ueno ◽  
Wataru Ishizuka ◽  
Ikutaro Tsuyama ◽  
...  

Research Highlights: We detected the longitudinal gradients of genetic diversity parameters, such as the number of alleles, effective number of alleles, heterozygosity, and inbreeding coefficient, and found that these might be attributable to climatic conditions, such as temperature and snow depth. Background and Objectives: Genetic diversity among local populations of a plant species at its distributional margin has long been of interest in ecological genetics. Populations at the distribution center grow well in favorable conditions, but those at the range margins are exposed to unfavorable environments, and the environmental conditions at establishment sites might reflect the genetic diversity of local populations. This is known as the central-marginal hypothesis in which marginal populations show lower genetic variation and higher differentiation than in central populations. In addition, genetic variation in a local population is influenced by phylogenetic constraints and the population history of selection under environmental constraints. In this study, we investigated this hypothesis in relation to Abies sachalinensis, a major conifer species in Hokkaido. Materials and Methods: A total of 1189 trees from 25 natural populations were analyzed using 19 EST-SSR loci. Results: The eastern populations, namely, those in the species distribution center, showed greater genetic diversity than did the western peripheral populations. Another important finding is that the southwestern marginal populations were genetically differentiated from the other populations. Conclusions: These differences might be due to genetic drift in the small and isolated populations at the range margin. Therefore, our results indicated that the central-marginal hypothesis held true for the southernmost A. sachalinensis populations in Hokkaido.


1964 ◽  
Vol 96 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 436-451 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. G. Wellington

AbstractInactive moths of Malacosoma pluviale (Dyar) oviposit near their birthplaces, and most of their offspring also are inactive. More active moths can travel farther before they oviposit, and always have a higher proportion of vigorous individuals among their progeny.Such polymorphism allows the insect to cope with environmental diversity; e.g., inactive residents exploit favourable habitats, and active migrants colonize more severe habitats, or replenish the vigour of other populations.Because the most active moths usually export the most vigorous progeny, the population left behind becomes less vigorous during successive generations. This steadily decreasing vitality eliminates local populations that are not replenished by vigorous immigrants.Qualitative changes in Malacosoma populations follow this basic pattern, but the rate of deterioration is affected by the habitat. Departing migrants fly too high to be stopped by small trees in farmland, bur many are stopped near their source by tall trees in forests. Deterioration therefore is slower in forests. Forests also delay return migration to nearby farmlands, and thus allow some farmland populations to deteriorate unchecked.In a fluctuating climate, the size of the area tolerable for the species varies annually. When it begins to expand, the vigorous progeny of active moths can take immediate advantage of slight local improvements. Consequently, they are the first to exploit each marginal habitat that becomes tolerable. But while better climate persists, some less active descendants of these pioneers appear in all occupied habitats.When the regional climate deteriorates, the tolerable area contracts, and most marginal populations are totally destroyed. Moreover, even within the contracted tolerable area, the harsher climate becomes intolerable for any deteriorated stock. In the next generation, therefore, the only regional survivors are vigorous colonies deposited in the tolerable area by some of the few migrants that escaped the widespread destruction of the preceding generation in the margins. Their descendants recolonize depopulated sections of the refuge, and so preserve the species in the region while the climate remains severe.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Javier Morente-López ◽  
Jamie M. Kass ◽  
Carlos Lara-Romero ◽  
Josep María Serra-Diaz ◽  
José Carmen Soto-Correa ◽  
...  

AbstractGeographically disparate populations within a species’ range may show important differences including variation in ecological, demographic, genetic and phenotypic characteristics. Based on the Center-Periphery Hypothesis, it is often assumed that environmental conditions are optimal in the geographic center of the range and stressful or suboptimal at the periphery, implying ecological marginality is concordant with geographic periphery. But this assumption has been challenged as geographical and ecological gradients are not necessarily concordant. The conservation value of populations inhabiting environmentally marginal areas is still under debate and is closely related with their evolutionary potential. Strong selective pressures caused by stressful conditions may generate novel adaptations in marginal areas, conferring these populations distinct evolutionary potential. But populations inhabiting marginal areas may also show reductions in neutral and adaptive genetic diversity via drift and inbreeding.In this work we explore the potential of ecological niche models (ENMs) to identify environmentally optimal and marginal areas, as well as the principal putative selective pressures likely to act. To do so, we built a carefully parameterized ENM of Silene ciliata, a dominant plant species of Mediterranean alpine habitats. Complementarily, we selected wild populations inhabiting contrasting environmental conditions and carried out common garden experiments to detect genetic differentiation among populations associated with functional traits. With the resulting information, we tested whether environmentally marginal populations defined by the ENM had genetically differentiated phenotypes that are potentially adaptive and, thus, of conservation value.We found genetically based phenotypic differentiation of phenological traits between populations inhabiting areas identified by the ENM as marginal and optimal, as well as between populations with different habitat suitability values. Results supported ENMs as powerful tools for determining environmental marginality and identifying selection pressures, and thus also as hypothesis generators for divergent selection. Furthermore, genetically based phenotypic differentiation found underlines the potential adaptive value of populations inhabiting marginal areas. The approach developed here provides a theoretically justified and practical way to study adaptive processes and provide insights about the conservation value of marginal populations.


Author(s):  
Marcus Pierre de Carvalho Baptista ◽  
Francisco de Assis de Sousa Nascimento ◽  
Mary de Carvalho Baptista

The article discusses both the litigious situation between the provinces of Piauí and Ceará at the end of the 19th century, related to what was then the village of Amarração on the coast of Piauí, as well as the local political influence on the issue. In the Imperial Senate, the litigation caused clashes between Senator João Lustosa da Cunha Paranaguá from Piauí, and Senator Domingos José Nogueira Jaguariber from Ceará, for both of whom the territory in question was equally important for their provinces. For the former, the condition of Amarração as an outlet for products through the construction of a seaport was necessary for the progress of Piaui’s economy, thus justifying his proposal to exchange Amarração, belonging to Ceará, for Vale do Crateús in the Serra da Ibiapaba, located then in Piauí. We used as sources the newspapers “A Imprensa” and “A Época” which published transcripts of the speeches given by both senators on the issue between the years 1880 and 1884. We also analyzed the perspectives on the proposed exchange held by the Liberal and Conservative Parties, the main political groups in Piauí at the time. We point out that the litigation situation caused clashes between not only Piauí and Ceará but also between the local elites themselves, since both parties disagreed on the issue. In addition, our analysis shows that the litigation led to other sensitive issues equally important for the materialization of the exchange, such as the drought and, especially, the wishes of the local populations.


2021 ◽  

The Ptolemaic and Seleucid empires are usually studied separately, or else included in broader examinations of the Hellenistic world. This book provides a systematic comparison of the roles of local elites and local populations in the construction, negotiation, and adaptation of political, economic, military and ideological power within these states in formation. The two states, conceived as multi-ethnic empires, are sufficiently similar to make comparisons valid, while the process of comparison highlights and better explains differences. Regions that were successively incorporated into the Ptolemaic and then Seleucid state receive particular attention, and are understood within the broader picture of the ruling strategies of both empires. The book focusses on forms of communication through coins, inscriptions and visual culture; settlement policies and the relationship between local and immigrant populations; and the forms of collaboration with and resistance of local elites against immigrant populations and government institutions.


2018 ◽  
Vol 56 (3) ◽  
pp. 371-394 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joanny Bélair

AbstractFocusing on one of the most targeted areas for land investments in Tanzania (Rufiji district), this article compares the involvement of two Tanzanian state agencies in land acquisition, in the context of the central government's new strategy on productive investors. Given the fragmented and contentious authority of many African states, I investigate the impact of state intermediaries on the relationships between investors and local populations and consider bureaucrats as a group of actors to analyse flows of power within the state. I make two main points. First, the central state's weak infrastructural power and resulting lack of local knowledge, and, conversely, local bureaucrats’ possession of these valuable resources, reverses the flow of power from local to central. Second, a central monitoring process might have a negative effect. Instead of protecting vulnerable populations, it fosters institutional innovations that protect local bureaucrats’ opportunities for accumulation with investors, to the detriment of local populations.


Author(s):  
Leticia Arroyo Abad

ABSTRACTThe power of the elites became the dominant explanation of the extension of the franchise and expansion of the provision of public services. Peru from 1876 to 1940 presents a contrasting case. Although restricting political participation through literacy requirements, Peru saw an increase in literacy and schooling. Nevertheless, the relative power of the national and local elites articulated the national policies resulting in unequal provision of education. Constrained political access of the economic minority, the indigenous population, translated into a widening gap in terms of educational attainment.


Author(s):  
Satayendra Kumar ◽  
L.B. Rawal ◽  
Saudan Singh

Habitat geography is the new sprout branch of human geography. Both rural domicile and urban domicile are the two main strands of geography. Habitat geography studies the effect of physical and cultural considerations on man-made habitats, just as human geography describes the environment and human interactions. Human occupancy is the focal center within and around which man builds his culture. Human occupancy refers to all the natural elements and man-made structures that the process of habitat establishes, habitat boundaries that separate them from each other, spatial relationships that link them to both adjacent and remote areas, and The institute, which has been set up to maintain its social and cultural, economic, political and other importance. अधिवास भूगोल मानव भूगोल की नवीन अंकुरित शाखा है। ग्रामीण अधिवास और नगरीय अधिवास दोनों ही अधिवास भूगोल के दो प्रमुख तन्तु है। अधिवास भूगोल मानव द्वारा निर्मित आवासों पर भौतिक तथा सांस्कृतिक बातों के प्रभाव का अध्ययन करता है, ठीक उसी भाॅंति जिस प्रकार मानव भूगोल वातावरण तथा मानव के पारस्परिक सम्बन्धों का विष्लेशण करता है। मानव अधिवास वह नाभीय केन्द्र है जिनके भीतर व जिसके चारों ओर मानव अपनी संस्कृति का निर्माण करता है। मानव अधिवास उन सभी प्राकृतिक तत्वों और मानव निर्मित संरचनाओं की ओर संकेत करता है जो बसाव स्थापन की प्रक्रिया आवासों का स्थापन, मानवीय सीमाएँ जो उनको एक-दूसरे से अलग करती है, स्थानिक सम्बन्ध जो उसको समीपवर्ती तथा दूरस्थ दोनों ही क्षेत्रों से जोड़ते है तथा वह संस्थान सामाजिक सांस्कृतिक, आर्थिक, राजनीतिक तथा अन्य जिनका स्थापन उसे संचालित व प्रधानता बनाये रखने के लिए किया गया है।


Author(s):  
Tanisha Jemma Rose Spratt

AbstractIn this article I consider the role of passing and performance in the everyday lives of alkaptonuria (AKU) and vitiligo patients. Race, LGBTQ, gender and disability scholars have long used the term passing to describe sub-groups of people within marginal populations who intentionally manipulate their bodies or alter their behaviour in order to claim identities that are not socially assigned to them at birth. In this paper I demonstrate the effectiveness of the passing strategies that patients use in order to mitigate their disease symptoms and render them invisible, thus enabling them to pass as “healthy” or unaffected by their condition. I further consider how patients who choose not to pass utilise resistance strategies in order to generate awareness of their disease and encourage funding for it. I conclude by assessing the effectiveness of these strategies in determining whether or not patients can pass, and the ways in which this is aided or hindered by their social and economic status.


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