To reserve or not to reserve: the battle over forest conservation in the Gold Coast, 1889–1927

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

To reserve or not to reserve : the battle over forest conservation in the Gold Coast, 1889–1927. / Hansen, Christian Pilegaard.

In: Journal of Historical Geography, Vol. 79, 2023, p. 65-75.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hansen, CP 2023, 'To reserve or not to reserve: the battle over forest conservation in the Gold Coast, 1889–1927', Journal of Historical Geography, vol. 79, pp. 65-75. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhg.2022.11.003

APA

Hansen, C. P. (2023). To reserve or not to reserve: the battle over forest conservation in the Gold Coast, 1889–1927. Journal of Historical Geography, 79, 65-75. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhg.2022.11.003

Vancouver

Hansen CP. To reserve or not to reserve: the battle over forest conservation in the Gold Coast, 1889–1927. Journal of Historical Geography. 2023;79:65-75. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhg.2022.11.003

Author

Hansen, Christian Pilegaard. / To reserve or not to reserve : the battle over forest conservation in the Gold Coast, 1889–1927. In: Journal of Historical Geography. 2023 ; Vol. 79. pp. 65-75.

Bibtex

@article{87a1273037a8415082bdb015d0283cc2,
title = "To reserve or not to reserve: the battle over forest conservation in the Gold Coast, 1889–1927",
abstract = "This paper examines opposition to colonial forest control and forest legislation in the Gold Coast Colony between 1889 and 1927. In the Gold Coast, forest legislation allowing the constitution of forest reserves, came late compared to other British colonies. The paper explains why. It describes the alliance between Gold Coast customary rulers (chiefs), the indigenous educated elite and British interests that came together to oppose, first, colonial plans of land control, subsequently forest control. This alliance put together an effective, long-standing and sophisticated opposition, but eventually it collapsed, and this allowed the Gold Coast Forests Ordinance to be enacted in 1927. The paper attributes the collapse to the emergence of conflicting interests within the coalition. This was – at least partly – the result of a revised colonial policy in the Gold Coast after WWI which resulted in closer collaboration between the colonial authorities and the traditional authorities (paramount chiefs) at the expense of the educated elite. The Gold Coast Forests Ordinance confirmed customary ownership over forests and the role of traditional authorities. The paper and the Gold Coast case illustrates the limits of the colonial state and that empire forestry was not everywhere a project of seamless control and implementation, but one in need of adaptation and compromise.",
author = "Hansen, {Christian Pilegaard}",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.jhg.2022.11.003",
language = "English",
volume = "79",
pages = "65--75",
journal = "Journal of Historical Geography",
issn = "0305-7488",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - To reserve or not to reserve

T2 - the battle over forest conservation in the Gold Coast, 1889–1927

AU - Hansen, Christian Pilegaard

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - This paper examines opposition to colonial forest control and forest legislation in the Gold Coast Colony between 1889 and 1927. In the Gold Coast, forest legislation allowing the constitution of forest reserves, came late compared to other British colonies. The paper explains why. It describes the alliance between Gold Coast customary rulers (chiefs), the indigenous educated elite and British interests that came together to oppose, first, colonial plans of land control, subsequently forest control. This alliance put together an effective, long-standing and sophisticated opposition, but eventually it collapsed, and this allowed the Gold Coast Forests Ordinance to be enacted in 1927. The paper attributes the collapse to the emergence of conflicting interests within the coalition. This was – at least partly – the result of a revised colonial policy in the Gold Coast after WWI which resulted in closer collaboration between the colonial authorities and the traditional authorities (paramount chiefs) at the expense of the educated elite. The Gold Coast Forests Ordinance confirmed customary ownership over forests and the role of traditional authorities. The paper and the Gold Coast case illustrates the limits of the colonial state and that empire forestry was not everywhere a project of seamless control and implementation, but one in need of adaptation and compromise.

AB - This paper examines opposition to colonial forest control and forest legislation in the Gold Coast Colony between 1889 and 1927. In the Gold Coast, forest legislation allowing the constitution of forest reserves, came late compared to other British colonies. The paper explains why. It describes the alliance between Gold Coast customary rulers (chiefs), the indigenous educated elite and British interests that came together to oppose, first, colonial plans of land control, subsequently forest control. This alliance put together an effective, long-standing and sophisticated opposition, but eventually it collapsed, and this allowed the Gold Coast Forests Ordinance to be enacted in 1927. The paper attributes the collapse to the emergence of conflicting interests within the coalition. This was – at least partly – the result of a revised colonial policy in the Gold Coast after WWI which resulted in closer collaboration between the colonial authorities and the traditional authorities (paramount chiefs) at the expense of the educated elite. The Gold Coast Forests Ordinance confirmed customary ownership over forests and the role of traditional authorities. The paper and the Gold Coast case illustrates the limits of the colonial state and that empire forestry was not everywhere a project of seamless control and implementation, but one in need of adaptation and compromise.

U2 - 10.1016/j.jhg.2022.11.003

DO - 10.1016/j.jhg.2022.11.003

M3 - Journal article

VL - 79

SP - 65

EP - 75

JO - Journal of Historical Geography

JF - Journal of Historical Geography

SN - 0305-7488

ER -

ID: 331318325