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cover of episode Maron E. Greenleaf, "Forest Lost: Producing Green Capitalism in the Brazilian Amazon" (Duke UP, 2024)

Maron E. Greenleaf, "Forest Lost: Producing Green Capitalism in the Brazilian Amazon" (Duke UP, 2024)

2025/5/10
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Maron E. Greenleaf: 我在本书中研究了巴西亚马逊雨林阿克里州的森林碳抵消项目,旨在理解绿色资本主义的实践及其对当地社会、文化和政治的影响。我的研究始于对森林碳抵消的供应链分析,但由于其价值在于保持森林原状而非提取资源,我转而关注维持森林碳价值的各种关系网络,包括人类与非人类的关系、土地权属、政府政策以及经济发展模式等。阿克里州独特的历史背景,特别是其与橡胶产业的密切联系,深刻影响了该地区土地权属和环境保护的复杂性。我的研究结果表明,绿色资本主义既带来了环境保护的机遇,也加剧了社会不平等和政治冲突。BR-364公路的修建是这一复杂关系的缩影,它既促进了经济发展,也加剧了森林砍伐。此外,绿色资本主义的局限性与巴西右翼民粹主义的兴起之间存在着内在联系。未来,我计划继续研究阿克里州的橡胶产业以及英国的植树造林项目,以进一步探讨人类与树木之间的关系以及绿色资本主义在不同环境下的表现。 Olivia Bianchi: 作为访谈主持人,我没有提出具体的观点,而是引导Maron E. Greenleaf阐述其研究内容,并就其研究方法、理论框架以及研究结果进行深入探讨。

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Forest Lost: Producing Green Capitalism in the Brazilian Amazon )(2024) is an ethnography of forest carbon offsets and the wider effort to make the living rainforest valuable in the Brazilian Amazon. Situated in the state of Acre, which continuously had to grapple with a complex positionality between frontier and periphery, Maron E. Greenleaf explores forest carbon offset to understand green capitalism. Commodifying forest carbon offset requires keeping carbon in place through forest protection and valuation, unlike other forest commodities – for example Açaí berries, which also feature in the ethnography – that involve extraction. Initially set out to do a supply chain analysis, Greenleaf instead wrote a well-thought-out account disentangling the relationships at play in a place which at the time was celebrated for being ‘a leader in forest- focused development’, through tracing the complexity of the uneven, contingent and contesting cultural, material and multispecies relations involved in making forest carbon valuable. At the same time, she illustrates how forest carbon’s commodification turned it into a source of redistributable public environmental wealth and how green capitalism can also reinforce just the marginalization it seeks to combat. By outlining these complex relations and tensions, Greenleaf elucidates broader efforts to create a capitalism suited to the Anthropocene and those efforts’ alluring promises and vexing failures.

Mentioned in this episode:

  • Anand, Nikhil. Hydraulic City: Water and the Infrastructures of Citizenship in Mumbai. Duke University Press, 2017.

  • Appadurai, Arjun, et al. The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective. Edited by Arjun Appadurai, Cambridge University Press, 1986.

  • Holston, James. Insurgent Citizenship: Disjunctions of Democracy and Modernity in Brazil. Princeton University Press, 2008.

Maron E. Greenleaf) is a cultural anthropologist, political ecologist and legal scholar and currently Assistant Professor at the Anthropology Department at Dartmouth. She is interested in how human and more-than-human relationships are shaped through efforts linked to environmental crisis. Her topics of interest include landscapes, green economies, environmental justice and land rights.

Olivia Bianchi) is a postgraduate student at the University of Oxford, currently finishing the MSc program in Visual, Material and Museum Anthropology. Her interests include anthropological inquiries into materials, especially textiles, as well as the topics of sustainability and waste more generally.

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