Catherine A. Corson is the Leslie and Sarah Miller Director of the Center for the Environment and Miller Worley Associate Professor of Environmental Studies at Mount Holyoke College and has worked in the White House, United States Agency for International Development, United States Congress, and World Bank. She lives in Amherst, MA.
“An incisive and devastating account of the transnational politics
of conservation. A must read!”—Michael Goldman, author of Imperial
Nature: The World Bank and Struggles for Social Justice in the Age
of Globalization
*Michael Goldman*
“Catherine Corson masterfully shows how a conjuncture of devoted
people carrying diverse interests and operating with institutional
constraints came together to focus American development aid in
Madagascar on biodiversity in parks.”—Christian Kull, author of
Isle of Fire: The Political Ecology of Landscape Burning in
Madagascar
*Christian Kull*
“Corson’s remarkable multi-sited ethnography exposes the narratives
and power relations of neo-liberal conservation in one of the
world’s most hotly-contested landscapes. As environmental politics
intensify in an era of climate change and financialisation, this is
vital reading for all concerned with the intertwined futures of
Africa’s forests and people.”—Melissa Leach, University of
Sussex
*Melissa Leach*
“Truly brilliant! Catherine Corson traces the environmental story
in the one of the world’s most important biodiversity hotspots,
showing how international and national power struggles undermined
the well-meaning efforts of conservationists and donors, distorting
sustainable development objectives in the country and ignoring the
realities of peasant livelihoods. Personal insights from
involvements in USAID, DFID, and numerous interactions in
Madagascar and on Capitol Hill enliven this gripping
account. It is a fascinating and well-documented read,
brim-full of challenging perspectives for anyone engaged in trying
to save the planet. It is indeed an important book.”—Sir Richard
Jolly, Institute of Development Studies
*Sir Richard Jolly*
“From the villages of rural Madagascar to the board rooms of
conservation organisations in Washington DC, Corridors of Power
traces the fascinating story of conservation in one of the world’s
most biodiverse rich regions. Its rich ethnographic approach shows
how knowledge and politics intertwine in the framing and practice
of biodiversity conservation. This is a ‘must read’ book for anyone
interested in conservation and development in Africa and
beyond.”—Ian Scoones, author of Sustainable Livelihoods and Rural
Development
*Ian Scoones*
“This is a highly original book, which makes a major contribution
to our understandings of theoretical debates around neoliberalism,
policy formation, and the roles of international actors. It
provides a fascinating and in-depth analysis, and as such this book
deserves to be widely read.”—Rosaleen Duffy, SOAS University
London
*Rosaleen Duffy*
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