For the Sake of Forests and Gods documents the consequences of nonstate actors impinging on the existence of Indigenous peoples in the remote highlands of Palawan Island, the Philippines. Nimble, focused, and well-funded, religious and environmental organizations increasingly assume governmental authority over the lives and livelihoods of the Pala'wan people within their ancestral territories.

Wolfram H. Dressler traces these actors' history and contemporary practices, revealing how they bypass the state to govern the less governed. In the highlands, environmental NGOs valorize customary objects and practices to suppress swidden and support forest conservation, while evangelical missionaries regulate Pala'wan beliefs, health, and hygiene.

Bridging material studies and biopolitics, For the Sake of Forests and Gods explores how these nonstate actors use customary objects for comprehensive reforms of Pala'wan bodies and souls, centering on how the unique properties of the Tingkep basket mediate nonstate biopower. These reforms impact highlanders differently: some adopt biopolitical ideals willingly, others for political and economic gain. Yet others resist interventions, prioritizing family livelihoods. Ultimately, Dressler argues that Indigenous sovereignty matters more than ever as nonstate biopower intensifies in Southeast Asia's uplands.

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Introduction: Governing the Ungoverned
1. Biopolitics, Materialities, and the Politics of Difference
2. Upland Living and Tingkep Worlds
3. Spanish Colonists, Forests, and Gods
4. American Foresters, Nonstate Rule, and the Tribal "Other"
5. Of Forests and Gods
6. For the Sake of Forests
7. For the Sake of Gods

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Wolfram Dressler's For the Sake of Forests and Gods critically challenges the foundations of development discourses that drive state and nonstate interventions amid complex global-local power dynamics. Dressler explores how these policies impact the Pala'wan people, whose contested forests form the Philippines' "last ecological frontier." The book reveals the ironic invocation of nature's spirits and gods by various actors—encroaching forces and resistors alike—exposing the violence in governing nature and underscoring the ties between nature and justice.
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Product details

ISBN
9781501779268
Published
2025-02-15
Publisher
Cornell University Press
Weight
454 gr
Height
229 mm
Width
152 mm
Age
01, UP, 05
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
277

Biographical note

Wolfram H. Dressler is Professor at the School of Geography, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Melbourne. He is the author of Old Thoughts in New Ideas, and coeditor of Nature™ Inc.