Power and Property Rights
Locating Agrarian Publics
Environments Undone
Fate of Food
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Amity Doolittle

Amity Doolittle's research focuses on how control over and access to natural resources is defined, negotiated and contested by local communities and national governments. Her approach is interdisciplinary, combining perspectives from anthropology, political science, environmental history and political ecology to explore property relations and conflicts over resources use. Her research has taken her to Malaysian Borneo where she studied British colonial law and native customary land rights in order to better understand contemporary land use conflicts in Malaysia. In Honduras she has worked with rural mountain communities who live inside the buffer zone of a national park growing coffee. In her work there she is trying to negotiate between conservationists and local farmers regarding the future protection of biodiversity in the Honduran cloud forest and the continued cultivation of coffee for local livelihoods. She is currently working on an analysis of newspaper coverage of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans to see how race and class are defined, talked about and reproduced in print media. The goal of this work is to better understand how “everyday racism” is written about and characterized in American society.

With colleagues at Yale she is conducting research on the socio-economic costs and benefits of oil palm plantations in Indonesia, with specific emphasis on the loss of access to native lands and the shift for local peoples from subsistence based livelihoods to plantations workers. In Panama and Singapore she and Yale colleagues, in collaboration with the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, are building an Environmental Leadership and Training Initiative that aims to enhance environmental conservation and leadership capacity in the tropics through short courses, workshops and field courses that provide cutting edge learning and networking opportunities.

The greatest real world outcome of her academic work thus far is that her book on land rights in Malaysia was used to set legal precedence in Sabah High Court, winning customary land rights for native people who had been evicted from their traditional lands.


 

 

 

 

This Sawyer Seminar, funded by the Mellon Foundation, includes a year-long series of working group meetings
and mini-conferences on the central theme of globalization and the land. It is hosted by UNC's Center for Global Initiatives.