3.8 Article

Agroecology on the periphery: A case from the Maya-Achi territory, Guatemala

Journal

DESENVOLVIMENTO E MEIO AMBIENTE
Volume 58, Issue -, Pages 604-621

Publisher

UNIV FEDERAL PARANA, EDITORA
DOI: 10.5380/dma.v58i0.81466

Keywords

Agroecology; Maya-Achi; Guatemala; non-governmental organizations; development

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Efforts to scale agroecological practices in the Maya-Achi territory of Guatemala face complex challenges, including weak factors such as constructivist learning methods, public policies, and social fabric, as well as the social fragmentation caused by violence and repression in the 1980s. However, practices like revalorization of ancestral practices could still be crucial strategies for community recovery.
In this paper we examine processes of scaling agroecological practices in the Maya-Achi territory of Guatemala. We compare the Achi case to other examples documented in the literature and the key factors, or drivers, reported as important if not essential for scaling to occur. We find that the Achi scase is complex with regard to these drivers. Factors such as constructivist learning/teaching methods, favorable public policies, and strong social fabric appear to be weak, absent, or even negative. This is due in part to the violence and repression of the 1980s, which resulted in the assassination of 20 percent of the population by the military and paramilitaries, leaving the territory socially fragmented. Projects incorporating agroecology (revalorization of ancestral practices, seed saving, elimination of external inputs, strengthening soil health, increasing/guarding agrobiodiversity) are viewed as a potential strategy to aid in community recovery, and are promoted by local associations as well as by international institutions and NGOs. While social and cultural recuperation were initially hypothesized as primary causes for the adoption of practices, we encounter a range of additional and complex factors, such as the expectation of economic benefits and the presence of aid and development organizations. By analyzing these drivers and barriers we contribute to the ongoing debate over how agroecological practices may be scaled-out, particularly in regions exhibiting less than ideal conditions.

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