Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5074190 Geoforum 2012 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

This article provides a new way of analyzing and defining contemporary bioprospecting under emerging frameworks of neoliberal conservation. I document how bioprospecting has changed over time on the island-nation of Madagascar due to shifts in environmental governance. The most significant change includes efforts to speed up and industrialize the production of new drugs derived from nature. This has been accomplished through the switching over to rational collection strategies that employ new geo-referencing technologies, global networks of herbarium archives, and high-technology rapid screening methods. Results show that nature is re-constituted, traditional knowledge is rendered inefficient, and labour is mechanized within sites of production. This study demonstrates how changes in bioprospecting alter the way Malagasy scientists and local resource users participate in the practice and diminish their decision making power over natural resources. These developments, in turn, cause some Malagasy scientists, researchers and administrators to question their participation in bioprospecting projects and reveal that current natural resource policies of extraction, commercialization and benefit-sharing face many challenges.

► Provides a critical analysis of contemporary bioprospecting. ► Bioprospectors' use of new technology restructures labour intensifying inequalities. ► Malagasy diminishing participation also decreases power over natural resource use. ► Shifts the bioprospecting debate surrounding benefits towards participatory justice.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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