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English
Publikasjoner

Scrubs and Squatters: The Coming of the Dukuduku Forest, an Indigenous Forest in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

Vitenskapelig artikkel
Publiseringsår
2013
Tidsskrift
Environmental History
Eksterne nettsted
Cristin
Fulltekst
Doi
NIVA-involverte
Frode Sundnes
Forfattere
Frode Sundnes

Sammendrag

Against the backdrop of current demands of historical redress and restitution of land in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, this article provides a historical analysis of landscape change and changing ideas about nature in relation to the Dukuduku forest. From the time of the first written sources in the mid-nineteenth century up until the point when the forest turned into an informal settlement area in the 1990s, people have used and perceived the forest. Dukuduku's image as a pristine indigenous forest is problematic, for it obscures local lives and histories. Inhabitation of the Dukuduku forest is not a recent phenomenon. Colonial preservation measures have little continuity with present-day environmentalism. The article demonstrates the incompleteness of a wilderness vision of nature in which humans intervene by utilitarian motives or conservation visions.