The Good, the Ugly and the Dirty Harry's of Conservation: Rethinking the Anthropology of Conservation NGOs.

Autor: Bille Larsen, Peter
Zdroj: Conservation & Society; Jan-Mar2016, Vol. 14 Issue 1, p21-33, 13p
Abstrakt: For the past decade, narrative portrayals of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) growing big, 'ugly', and business-minded have become common in both social science and public discourse. At a time when both engagement within NGOs as well as critical analysis from the outside has blossomed, how are the social sciences and anthropology in particular responding? This article suggests that a set of meta-narratives characterise much of the literature analysing conservation NGOs. Such narratives respectively position NGOs as doing good, turning ugly or acting pragmatically through what I label 'Dirty Harry' characteristics. While the critique of conservation NGOs offers a much needed 'reality check', it is time to revisit dichotomies of the 'good' past and the ugly present. The article reviews trends in the literature and offers a case study from the Peruvian Amazon. The final synthesis emphasises the need for a less essentialist perspective tracing heterogeneity and change of NGO activity over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index