Mandated Landscape

Mandated Landscape

Author: Roza El-Eini

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2004-11-23

Total Pages: 859

ISBN-13: 1135772398

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In this ground-breaking authoritative study, a highly documented and incisive analysis is made of the galvanising changes wrought to the people and landscape of British Mandated Palestine (1929-1948). Using a comprehensive and interdisciplinary approach, the book’s award-winning author examines how the British imposed their rule, dominated by the clashing dualities of their Mandate obligations towards the Arabs and the Jews, and their own interests. The rulers’ Empire-wide conceptions of the ‘White man’s burden’ and preconceptions of the Holy Land were potent forces of change, influencing their policies. Lucidly written, Mandated Landscape is also a rich source of information supported by numerous maps, tables and illustrations, and has 66 appendices, a considerable bibliography and extensive index. With a theoretical and historical backdrop, the ramifications of British rule are highlighted in their impact on town planning, agriculture, forestry, land, the partition plans and a case study, presenting discussions on such issues as development, ecological shock, law and the controversial division of village lands, as the British operated in a politically turbulent climate, often within their own administration. This book is a major contribution to research on British Palestine and will interest those in Middle East, history, geography, development and colonial/postcolonial studies.


Report

Report

Author: New York (State). Department of Audit and Control

Publisher:

Published: 1918

Total Pages: 726

ISBN-13:

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Forest Politics in Kenya's Tugen Hills

Forest Politics in Kenya's Tugen Hills

Author: Léa Lacan

Publisher: Boydell & Brewer

Published: 2024-07-02

Total Pages: 301

ISBN-13: 1847013813

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Forests are a changing environment, impacted as much by people and politics as by the species-rich diversity they contain. This book explores human-sylvan relations in the Katimok forest, Baringo highlands, Kenya, and asks us to rethink the forest beyond questions of access and control of natural resources, as a habitat where forest politics and human lives are inextricably intertwined. Tracing the development of the Katimok forest from colonial times to the present day, the author shows how - as with many forests in Africa - it has become constructed as a category and territory of nature under state control: an area both to be protected and turned into exploitable resources. For those living within and on the boundaries of the forest, this social-ecological transformation has had a significant impact. Despite now being settled outside Katimok itself, dispossessed by administrators heedless of local management practices, many former residents continue to maintain a close connection with the forest, not only to sustain their livelihoods, but also to maintain their intimate links with ancestral lands, where their stories and memories are materially inscribed and powerfully invoked. Intimate connections to the forest are revealed to be as political as the use of its resources, culminating in local claims for redress of historical dispossessions.


Annual Report

Annual Report

Author: Manitoba. Department of Mines and Natural Resources

Publisher:

Published: 1947

Total Pages: 368

ISBN-13:

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Annual Report

Annual Report

Author: New York (State). Department of Audit and Control

Publisher:

Published: 1918

Total Pages: 724

ISBN-13:

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