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South America’s Neoliberal Agricultural Frontiers: Places of Environmental Sacrifice or Conservation Opportunity?

Description:

Neoliberal agricultural frontiers, defined as export-oriented
farming areas motivated more by global demand and
land privatization than by government subsidies, present
at least two major challenges for environmental researchers:
estimating land change and understanding governance
types and outcomes. Environmental governance,
the ‘‘filter’’ between human and biophysical systems, is
considered in terms of two models in light of empirical
evidence from a neoliberal frontier in the Brazilian
Cerrado (savanna) ecoregion. Land-change analysis
indicates that agricultural land uses increased from 12%
of the study region in 1986 to 44% in 2000 and 55% in
2005, with a corresponding loss of native Cerrado. A
prominent farming organization formed in 1990 has
participated in or led several environmental policy initiatives.
Evidence of both governance models is found, and
dilemmas facing environmental activists and managers,
as well as the farming sector, are presented. For
organizations representing large commercial farmers,
compliance with environmental regulations may be seen
as both a cost to be borne by the farming sector and as a
means to establish environmental credentials. Suggestions
are made for future longitudinal work on compliance,
information, agenda-setting, and discursive
strategies of nonstate actors in neoliberal frontiers.