The Dictionary of Human Geography

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indigenous people in these areas was system-
atically ignored. The same process of physical
clearance and conceptual deletion of previous
human presence accompanied the extension
of the Yellowstone model outside the USA. It
was soon copied in the British Dominions
(Canada 1887, Australia 1891 and New
Zealand 1894) and in colonial possessions in
africa(the Belgian Congo in 1925, South
Africa in 1926). Following the Second World
War, the model was adopted in East Africa,
asia and eventually globally as the inter-
national conservation movement grew
(Adams, 2004). The International Union for
the Conservation of Nature and Natural
Resources (IUCN) established a Provisional
Committee on National Parks in 1958, now
the World Commission on Protected Areas
(www.iucn.org/themes/wcpa). The United
Nations adopted a ‘World List of National
Parks and Equivalent Reserves’ in 1962, and
IUCN defined a series of protected area cat-
egories, of which US-style National Parks are
widely regarded as the most important (www.
unep-wcmc.org/protected_areas/categories/).
The global protected area network expanded
rapidly. By 2005, there were over 100,000
protected areas covering over 2 million
square kilometres, more than 12 per cent of
the Earth’s land surface.
National parks created internationally on
the Yellowstone model are imagined as places
free from human settlement. Their creation
has therefore often caused displacement of
indigenous or other peoples, either through
restrictions on access to land andresources
(including cultural sites) or direct forced
resettlement. Globally, there has been a per-
sistent failure to recognize historic human oc-
cupation of andrightsto land placed within
national parks, or to recognize the extent
of human modification of ‘wilderness’
(Neumann, 2004b). Partly because of opposi-
tion to such imposed parks, there has been
significant emphasis in international conserva-
tion policy on ‘community-based conserva-
tion’ and ‘park outreach projects’ that seek to
create local political and economic support for
parks (Hulme and Murphree, 2001). There
are also alternatives to the exclusive national
park model; for example, British National
Parks and French Parcs Re ́gionaux, which
are essentially planning designations to pre-
serve the quality of privately owned land.wma

nationalism A name for the modern social
and political formations that draw together
feelings of belonging, solidarity and

identification between national citizens and
theterritoryimagined as their collective na-
tional homeland. The existence and coherence
of a particularnationis in this sense best
understood as an ongoing product and not
the primordial precursor of nationalism. But
while nationalism can therefore be said to
make nations, they are neither illusions nor
invented like works of fiction. Although
Benedict Anderson’s phrase ‘imagined com-
munities’ has sometimes been misinterpreted
as suggesting such an inventive account, in
fact, his emphasis on the politically and
socially constructive work of nationalism in
producing nations is the heart of his much-
reprinted book (2006). Nations are imagined,
he argues, because nationalism mobilizes a
strong but abstract sense of community
between distant strangers in a way that
consolidates their identification with both a
common historical inheritance and a shared
national space. This is also why nationalism
is more social than the personal passions of
patriotism and less legal than the regulative
norms ofcitizenship, even though – as femi-
nist and queer geographers in particular have
underlined – it is clearly interwoven with each
(see Bell and Binnie, 2000; Marston, 1990:
see alsofeminist geographies).
In the most recent edition of his book,
Anderson reviews its many translations and
globe-trotting travels, further documenting
how nationalism clearly fosters distinct
national cultures of reading, writing, teaching
and communication. He underlines too that
one of his initial intentions in the book (and
one that he thinks accounts for much of its
global popularity) is that it shifted the geogra-
phical focus of the study of nationalism away
from europe (and the eurocentrism that
traditional Marxist accounts shared with trad-
itional liberal accounts) and towards various
post-colonial nationalisms of the global
south, including not least of all what he calls
the ‘creole nationalisms’ of the Americas
(a formulation that itself also usefully under-
mines exceptionalist American arguments
about US republicanism as the uniquely
pioneering prototype of post-colonial national-
ism). In making this case, however, Anderson
does not directly address the many ways in
which his arguments have both resonated with
and been advanced by various versions of
post-colonial theory (seepost-colonialism).
His own attention to the role ofmapsand
other geographical depictions in imagining the
communities of nationalism clearly resonates,
for example, with Edward Said’s theoretical

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_N Final Proof page 488 31.3.2009 3:13pm Compositor Name: ARaju

NATIONALISM
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