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“Everyone decided to declare war on the forest”: between territorial peace and pacification in the Colombian Andean-Amazon

Samper, Juan Antonio LU ; Krause, Torsten LU and López, Jesica LU orcid (2024) In Ecology and Society 29(4).
Abstract
In post-peace agreement Colombia, everyone declared war on the forest. In the Putumayo region, these wars take their own particular forms. Scientifically, the Putumayo is described as an Andean-Amazonic rainforest. For the indigenous and local inhabitants of the Putumayo, it is the Andean-Amazonic selva. We present three wars on the forest with material and discursive specificities and critically distinguish those that inherently involve violence from the ones that do not. We draw on a mix of empirical material to analyze how the wars on the forest have manifested in the Andean-Amazon. We find that both deforestation and the responses to combat it are two wars on the forest with one thing in common: violence. We also find that the selva is... (More)
In post-peace agreement Colombia, everyone declared war on the forest. In the Putumayo region, these wars take their own particular forms. Scientifically, the Putumayo is described as an Andean-Amazonic rainforest. For the indigenous and local inhabitants of the Putumayo, it is the Andean-Amazonic selva. We present three wars on the forest with material and discursive specificities and critically distinguish those that inherently involve violence from the ones that do not. We draw on a mix of empirical material to analyze how the wars on the forest have manifested in the Andean-Amazon. We find that both deforestation and the responses to combat it are two wars on the forest with one thing in common: violence. We also find that the selva is a territorialized political proposal with its own discursive and material elements. Drawing on the concept of territorial peace, we discuss the ambivalence of peacebuilding in relation to violence because it both legitimizes the continuation of violent wars on the forest while providing openings for territorial defense projects. This approach provides analytical avenues to observe the differences between peace and pacification. We contend that violence is incompatible with peace but not with pacification. Further, peace and pacification efforts can coexist under the discursive guise of peacebuilding. We show that peace requires the absence of violence but cannot be defined as the absence of violence alone, for such an understanding cannot distinguish a peaceful context’s territorial relations from those of a pacified context. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
deforestation, environmental defenders, mining, Putumayo, violence
in
Ecology and Society
volume
29
issue
4
article number
46
publisher
Resilience Alliance
external identifiers
  • scopus:85214426819
ISSN
1708-3087
DOI
10.5751/ES-15589-290446
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
dd480615-dc04-451e-9a3b-4396f0799e4f
date added to LUP
2025-01-08 15:29:39
date last changed
2025-07-01 01:50:00
@article{dd480615-dc04-451e-9a3b-4396f0799e4f,
  abstract     = {{In post-peace agreement Colombia, everyone declared war on the forest. In the Putumayo region, these wars take their own particular forms. Scientifically, the Putumayo is described as an Andean-Amazonic rainforest. For the indigenous and local inhabitants of the Putumayo, it is the Andean-Amazonic selva. We present three wars on the forest with material and discursive specificities and critically distinguish those that inherently involve violence from the ones that do not. We draw on a mix of empirical material to analyze how the wars on the forest have manifested in the Andean-Amazon. We find that both deforestation and the responses to combat it are two wars on the forest with one thing in common: violence. We also find that the selva is a territorialized political proposal with its own discursive and material elements. Drawing on the concept of territorial peace, we discuss the ambivalence of peacebuilding in relation to violence because it both legitimizes the continuation of violent wars on the forest while providing openings for territorial defense projects. This approach provides analytical avenues to observe the differences between peace and pacification. We contend that violence is incompatible with peace but not with pacification. Further, peace and pacification efforts can coexist under the discursive guise of peacebuilding. We show that peace requires the absence of violence but cannot be defined as the absence of violence alone, for such an understanding cannot distinguish a peaceful context’s territorial relations from those of a pacified context.}},
  author       = {{Samper, Juan Antonio and Krause, Torsten and López, Jesica}},
  issn         = {{1708-3087}},
  keywords     = {{deforestation; environmental defenders; mining; Putumayo; violence}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{4}},
  publisher    = {{Resilience Alliance}},
  series       = {{Ecology and Society}},
  title        = {{“Everyone decided to declare war on the forest”: between territorial peace and pacification in the Colombian Andean-Amazon}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-15589-290446}},
  doi          = {{10.5751/ES-15589-290446}},
  volume       = {{29}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}