Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6545851 | Journal of Rural Studies | 2014 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Rural development cooperation often took the form of a fix: external actors fixed a problem by introducing a fixed solution. Since the late 1980s the increased recognition of diversity, embeddedness and complexity, resulted in a shift from a 'best fix' approach to a 'best fit' approach. Context specificity replaced one-size-fits-all models. Yet in the specific case of forestry cooperation with the Yuracaré in Bolivia, it is argued no fit-in-context was found because of blurred phenomena and a confusing development situation. Moreover, the Yuracaré together with a Bolivian NGO blurred boundaries, reworked categorical divisions, and intermingled knowledge. This case sensitizes policy and rural development actors more generally to a novel conceptual and ontological perspective on such unstable situations, which revolve around fluidity. Fluid situations call for a rural development approach labelled 'go-with-the-flow'. Recognizing the heterogeneity of development situations implies that any singular approach to realise rural development is at best partial.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Forestry
Authors
Laurent Umans, Alberto Arce,