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Surviving utopia: Energy, social capital, and international migration in Ixcan, Guatemala

Posted on:2004-12-04Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Arizona State UniversityCandidate:Taylor, Matthew JohnFull Text:PDF
GTID:1469390011972072Subject:Geography
Abstract/Summary:
Mounting peasant impoverishment in Guatemala comes face to face with growing ecological impoverishment. Abysmal living standards for Guatemala's majority results from highly skewed land distribution, rapid population growth, and a brutal civil war, which lasted almost four decades and laid waste to many rural communities and fields. In the face of such adversity, Guatemalans migrate to remaining forested frontiers and make longer journeys to North America in search of work. In an attempt to understand and improve natural resource use, especially firewood, I uncover how networks of social relations (social capital) and international migration influence livelihoods in agricultural communities along a forested frontier.; I used both qualitative and quantitative methods to gather information about the lives of residents in four agricultural villages in Ixcán, Guatemala. The results from extended fieldwork illustrate how high levels of social capital can benefit the lives of rural residents. I argue that development programs can take advantage of existing high levels of social capital and take measures to create social capital where it is lacking to ensure the successful implementation of development programs. I also discuss firewood management in each community and demonstrate the disjuncture between local firewood use and national energy plans. Finally, I show how migrants and the money they send home from North America radically alter land use and land distribution in this part of rural Guatemala. My study reveals the need to examine the linkages between large-scale international migration, social capital, and the environment in communities that rely on the land for survival.
Keywords/Search Tags:Social capital, International migration, Guatemala, Land
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