Arizona: The Political Ecology of a Desert State

In this paper, I argue that the emerging research strategy of political ecology needs to incorporate an active nature into its analysis of the commodification of natural resources and the politics of resource control. I make reference to earlier work among small rancher-farmers in Cucurpe, Sonora, w...

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Main Author: Thomas E. Sheridan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Arizona Libraries 1995-12-01
Series:Journal of Political Ecology
Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/20130
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author Thomas E. Sheridan
author_facet Thomas E. Sheridan
author_sort Thomas E. Sheridan
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description In this paper, I argue that the emerging research strategy of political ecology needs to incorporate an active nature into its analysis of the commodification of natural resources and the politics of resource control. I make reference to earlier work among small rancher-farmers in Cucurpe, Sonora, where the nature of the crucial resources themselves--arable land, grazing land, and irrigation water--determined local agrarian politics as much or more as transnational market demand and Mexican federal agrarian policies. Then I examine water control in Arizona during the past century. I contend that one of the best ways to pursue political ecology is to focus upon the historical dialectic that determines how and why certain natural resources are converted into commodities at particular places and times and how commodity production transforms, and is transformed by, local ecosystems and local societies. Finally, I concur with anthropologist Thomas McGuire that this analysis must be resolutely empirical rather than based upon a priori models or assumptions.
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spelling doaj.art-254696b6f3084524b076776fd41319782022-12-21T19:51:53ZengUniversity of Arizona LibrariesJournal of Political Ecology1073-04511995-12-0121395710.2458/v2i1.2013019608Arizona: The Political Ecology of a Desert StateThomas E. SheridanIn this paper, I argue that the emerging research strategy of political ecology needs to incorporate an active nature into its analysis of the commodification of natural resources and the politics of resource control. I make reference to earlier work among small rancher-farmers in Cucurpe, Sonora, where the nature of the crucial resources themselves--arable land, grazing land, and irrigation water--determined local agrarian politics as much or more as transnational market demand and Mexican federal agrarian policies. Then I examine water control in Arizona during the past century. I contend that one of the best ways to pursue political ecology is to focus upon the historical dialectic that determines how and why certain natural resources are converted into commodities at particular places and times and how commodity production transforms, and is transformed by, local ecosystems and local societies. Finally, I concur with anthropologist Thomas McGuire that this analysis must be resolutely empirical rather than based upon a priori models or assumptions.https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/20130
spellingShingle Thomas E. Sheridan
Arizona: The Political Ecology of a Desert State
Journal of Political Ecology
title Arizona: The Political Ecology of a Desert State
title_full Arizona: The Political Ecology of a Desert State
title_fullStr Arizona: The Political Ecology of a Desert State
title_full_unstemmed Arizona: The Political Ecology of a Desert State
title_short Arizona: The Political Ecology of a Desert State
title_sort arizona the political ecology of a desert state
url https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/20130
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