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5. The
Sustainability of Traditional Systems in Developing Societies As was discussed above, the term "sustainable development"
is used here to imply maintained improvements in living levels, of which increased
consumption is only one aspect. The question of traditional resource management,
therefore, should not be examined only in terms of its efficiency in market economics: in
many cases, traditional ways of interacting with the environment provide a fundamental
basis to a community's well-being, and the abolition or support of traditional lifestyles
thus becomes a human rights issue. When cultural and social identity is inextricably bound
up in traditional forms of resource use, and when such communities desire to maintain this
identity,4 resource management policy decisions should not be made solely on
the basis of which system will provide a maximum economic yield. Thus the plight of
extractivist forest dwellers in the Amazon should not be dismissed because the marketing
of their products must be subsidized, and the disappearance of the pastoralist way of life
should not be considered an indispensable sacrifice to progress.
It is also important, however, not to idealize all
indigenous practices or communal societies. Many traditional societies are clearly
repressive, while even seemingly highly participatory traditional resource management
systems can be inegalitarian, and common property can in reality exclude large numbers of
people from enjoying the full benefits of its holdings. The exclusion of women from the
decision-making and/or the benefits of such systems is perhaps the most readily observable
example of inequality, although similar exclusions based on class, caste, and race are
also very common (Watson, 1989).
To many in the development community, however, the
question of the relative merits of different traditional systems is seen as moot: the
common perception is that the sustainability of traditional ways of life is being
threatened not only by exogenous pressures and policy decisions, but also by stresses
coming from within the community, including increased integration into the market economy,
increased contact with Western cultures, and population pressures. All of these factors do
inevitably bring changes to lifestyles, but no tradition has ever been static, and change
can occur without tradition being lost. The way in which current trends affect the
sustainability of resource use in traditional societies, and thus the viability of such
societies, remains a more open question, however. There are many examples of communities
which lose their incentives to preserve the resources on which they no longer depend as
capitalist development takes place, and they thus abandon their traditional management
practices and eventually lose their knowledge of them. This process is not inevitable,
however. Rainforest Indians establish market relations with North American ice-cream
chains without abandoning their relationship with the forest; African pastoralists
initiate political and economic contact with towns without losing their sense of reliance
on the land; and many communities throughout the Third World have even opted to market
their own "indigenousness" to tourists, while never giving up their own sense of
the value of their way of life.
The relationship between population growth and resource
degradation deserves special consideration because of the substantial attention it has
received in recent years. The approach to this question has changed little since Malthus,
and it is presently widely accepted that population growth will force resource extraction
to exceed the capacity of the environment to renew itself, and environmental degradation
will be the unavoidable result. Even among those who recognize that population pressure is
not the only or ultimate cause of environmental problems (Shaw, 1990), it is common to
argue that reducing population growth is nevertheless the most effective means of
arresting environmental decline.
In fact, however, evidence is mounting that the population
growth approach is an oversimplistic means of portraying the environmental problems of the
Third World. It is true, on the one hand, that in an ultimate sense the resources of the
Earth will be limited, and more specifically, that population pressures can contribute
directly to overexploitation of resources in situations where people do not have available
to them options which would allow them to adapt their behaviour in a sustainable way.5 However, concentrating on slowing demographic growth rates in
order to relieve particular environmental problems in the Third World is at best
ineffective and at worst misguided, diverting attention from more fundamental causes and
more productive solutions. As Somanathan (1991) demonstrates in a study of forest
management in the Himalaya, deforestation in the region has historically been associated
with government policy rather than changes in population size. When traditional forest
management systems were disturbed in the 1920s, deforestation occurred in widening circles
around villages in the span of a few years clearly too short a time for a
population explosion. The same study reveals that dense population does not necessarily
imply deforestation: the crowded valley below the Chandag Reserve, which has retained its
forestry control system, maintains well-protected panchayat forests, while the reserve
itself, under government control, has been degraded. Similarly, deforestation in Brazil
has been clearly demonstrated to have been influenced by a complex set of factors
including policy decisions (Mahar, 1989; Hecht and Cockburn, 1990), although this does not
prevent the continuing deforestation being ascribed to population pressure.
In addition, there is some evidence to show that the
practice of overexploiting resources can be, under some circumstances, connected with an
actual decline in population. A study undertaken in the Jebel Marra highlands of Sudan,
for instance, describes a situation in which carefully managed agroforestry systems have
been a part of the traditional environmental management practices of the region, and have
helped to support a densely settled population for centuries (Miehe, 1989). In recent
years, however, the population has declined substantially (due in large part to the pull
of newly accessible cities), and the resource management of the area has become less
rigourous, with the result that tree cover has actually declined. The only mature tree
plantations were planted over 60 years ago, and the knowledge that provided the basis for
sound plantation management has now largely been lost.
The need to refrain from overgeneralizing about the
effects of population dynamics on traditionally sustainable resource management systems is
well demonstrated by two studies of the traditional milpa agriculture of Mexico, a
complex and highly developed form of resource management involving forest extraction,
active fallow management and cultivation of maize and other crops. Barrera Bassols, Ortíz
Espejel and Medellin (1991) report on an indigenous community in northern Veracruz,
detailing the traditional agricultural practices which have remained productive for
generations in the context of a strong tradition of community identity, shared labour, and
a conscious effort to ensure the integrity of the environment. Recently, however,
population growth seems to have reached the point at which the traditional low-input,
shifting cultivation techniques will no longer be feasible: in 1989 chemical fertilizers
were used for the first time. García-Barrios and García-Barrios (1991) report on changes
taking place within the milpa of a community in the Mixteca Alta of Oaxaca. In this
case, dramatic declines in population due to outmigration have resulted in a situation
similar to the Jebel Marra case: the residents are beginning to lose the ecological
knowledge which formed the basis of the milpa system, and new techniques are not
being developed to replace it.
Although the outcome of these two Mexican cases is in some
ways similar, in that the traditional milpa agriculture has come under pressure
from endogenous forces, the indications are that the eventual outcome will be quite
different for the two communities. In the Oaxaca case, agricultural production is
declining faster than are the needs of the community, which are being reduced through
outmigration, while in the Veracruz case, the growing community has maintained not only
food self-sufficiency, but also substantial agricultural surpluses. The eventual outcome
of the changes taking place in the Veracruz community remains to be seen, but it is quite
possible that a new form of "traditional" resource management will be developed
which will continue to enable this community to fulfil its needs. From these two examples,
it is clear that population growth (and indeed population decline) is only linked to
unsustainable resource use to the extent that the population in question does not have the
means to adapt its resource management practices to the changing needs of the community.
In summary, the evidence shows that making generalized
judgements about the future of traditional resource management systems in the context of
development is inappropriate. It cannot be said that it is either possible or desirable to
maintain all such systems, and at the same time it is a mistake to dismiss them as
obsolete or unable to remain adaptable in the face of endogenous pressures. What is clear,
however, is that the presence of traditionally sustainable environmental practices can
provide opportunities for achieving sustainable development which should not be
overlooked. In some cases existing systems can arguably be maintained, at least for the
medium-term future, in the absence of interference (Polunin, 1985; Lane, 1990; Cummings,
1990). In other cases, traditional resource management techniques show potential for use
in informing successful new resource management initiatives (Draz, 1985; Bromley and
Cernea, 1989; Yabes, 1991).6 A third possibility is
that traditions of community management of resources will form the basis of community
action which specifically addresses environmental issues. Diegues (1990) argues that the
presence of traditional communities can be considered insurance that the environment will
be conserved, provided that their management schemes remain viable, because such
communities will not allow environmental degradation if it is in their power to arrest it.
It is this potential of traditional systems to provide the foundation of popular
initiatives that is the subject of the following section.
4 These of course are immensely complex issues, which, not being central to the
argument of this paper, will not be further discussed here.
5 The importance that the power of adaptation has for the outcome of population
growth is demonstrated by the fact that, as the Brundtland report points out, "a
child born in a country where levels of material and energy use are high places a greater
burden on the Earth's resources than a child born in a poorer country"
(WCED, 1987: par. 4.48). The emphasis of population programmes remains on the South,
however, while many Northern countries are undertaking concerted efforts to increase their
own birth-rates.
6 These two possibilities will be taken up further in future UNRISD work.
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