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Traditional Communities Weaving Territorial Development: Three Experiences Of Interactions Between Socio-Biodiversity, Markets, Public Policies And Collective Action
[Comunidades Tradicionales Tejiendo Desarrollo Territorial: Tres Experiencias De Interacciones Entre Sociobiodiversidad, Mercados, Políticas Públicas Y Acción Colectiva]

Author

Listed:
  • N. Cialdella
  • A.M. Castro Euler

    (Embrapa - Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária - MAPA - Ministério da Agricultura, Pecuária e Abastecimento [Brasil] - Governo do Brasil)

  • E. Superti

    (UFPB - Universidade Federal da Paraiba / Federal University of Paraiba)

  • Rosélis Remor De Souza Mazurek
  • Catherine Aubertin

    (PALOC - Patrimoines locaux, Environnement et Globalisation - MNHN - Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle - IRD - Institut de Recherche pour le Développement)

Abstract

Since the 1990s, the state of Amapá has invested in sustainable territorial development based on the economic valorisation of sociobiodiversity products, the recognition of the knowledge associated with these resources and held by traditional populations and communities (PCT). This model of endogenous development occurred in synergy with global dynamics in Brazilian federal policy, as well as in global markets. The article questions the role of several factors starting with the role of traditional populations in the success of the açaí market, which today is recognized as a catalyst for sustainable territorial development. Based on a reflexive analysis of three experiences in different parts of the state (Mazagão, Bailique, Oiapoque), the authors show different strategies relating traditional populations to the market according to their proximity (geographical and social) and degree of collective organization. Strategies in which public or private funding instruments are needed and mobilised in different ways (PGPM-Bio in riverside communities near the capital, PNGATI in indigenous lands, private funds in riverside communities in Bailique), in order to reinforce internal social dynamics. The informality still strongly weakens the position of the traditional populations and communities in all links of the chain, but opens spaces for consolidation of local markets, and thus food sovereignty.

Suggested Citation

  • N. Cialdella & A.M. Castro Euler & E. Superti & Rosélis Remor De Souza Mazurek & Catherine Aubertin, 2022. "Traditional Communities Weaving Territorial Development: Three Experiences Of Interactions Between Socio-Biodiversity, Markets, Public Policies And Collective Action [Comunidades Tradicionales Teji," Post-Print hal-03887756, HAL.
  • Handle: RePEc:hal:journl:hal-03887756
    DOI: 10.12957/geouerj.2022.64997
    Note: View the original document on HAL open archive server: https://hal.science/hal-03887756
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