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The political ecology of recovery from armed conflict: the case of landmines in Mozambique
Authors:Jon D Unruh  Nikolas C Heynen  Peter Hossler  
Institution:a Department of Geography, Student Building 120, N. 408 N. Indiana Avenue, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA;b Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Bolton Hall 410, P.O. Box 413, Milwaukee, WI 53201-0413, USA
Abstract:The devastation wrought by landmines on local populations is well known. However, the broader effects of mine presence on postwar recovery, and the progress of a ‘peace process’, remain largely unexamined. Both the academic and the practitioner literature regarding landmines lack a framework within which the mix of economic, political, social, agricultural, and ecological repercussions of mine presence in a context of postwar recovery can be investigated. Here, we consider the utility of political ecology to examine the influence of landmine presence on the socioecological relations important to postwar recovery in Mozambique. Landmines constitute the primary obstacle to the reconstruction and development in Mozambique. Because mine presence influences different aspects of recovery differently, we have selected three cases in the country where mine presence has impacted important components of recovery: agriculture, transportation corridors, and international investment. Peace process and recovery efforts by the international community do not presently address the broader, non-medical influences of landmine presence on recovery, and it is the intention of this article to contribute to an initial examination of these issues.
Keywords:Political ecology  Landmines  Mozambique  Postwar  Recovery
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