4.6 Article

Topological encounters in biodiversity conservation: Making and contesting maps in the Colombian high Andean paramos

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2022.983982

Keywords

map-making; conservation; topology; ontology; space; society; paramo

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Paramos in the Northern Andes are vital ecosystems that provide water for millions of people and support unique biodiversity. The conservation of these ecosystems has become important, but conflicts arise due to the presence of human communities, such as campesino communities, in these areas.
Paramos are one of the flagship ecosystems in the Northern Andes; the provision of water for millions of people in this region depends on these unique high mountains located at above 3,500 m of altitude. Besides, they are also the refuge of a rich biodiversity that is unique in the world, the conservation of which has become important in recent years. Human communities, such as campesino communities, have also inhabited some paramos. For example, in the Sumapaz region of central Colombia, campesino communities sought refuge in the paramos during the 20th century due to political violence. Since 2010, the Colombian government, following previous legislation and court sentences, has declared paramos strategic ecosystems, making their conservation a vital part of the environmental policy in the country. This was advanced through mapmaking as the tool to define clear-cut limits for human use, prohibiting mining, agriculture, and livestock in spaces demarcated as paramos. However, this made the conservation of the policy incompatible with the presence of campesinos living in paramos. Since then, their conservation in the Sumapaz region has been a contentious matter about what kind of paramos and biodiversity should be allowed and enacted in Colombia. As part of a two-year multi-sited ethnography with geographers and campesino communities in Sumapaz paramo, I developed a topological approach to study mapmaking practices in the context of biodiversity conservation. I argue that this can be a way to understand the diverse relations between humans and nature as partial space configurations that shape conservation practice and its forms of politics. With this social sciences contribution, I extend the mapmaking discussions in conservation that seek to open taken-for-granted notions of space that limit conservation possibilities for socioenvironmental change.

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