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The Complicity of Trees: The Socionatural Field of/for Tree Theft in Bulgaria

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2017

Chad Staddon*
Affiliation:
University of the West of England in Bristol

Abstract

This article presents a critical political ecology of the various forms of tree theft in a Bulgarian locality. Based on primary fieldwork carried out almost annually since 1992, Chad Staddon argues that even in a relatively tightly bounded space such as a single locality or forest stand, environment-society relationships are sufficiently complex to make the enterprises of analysis and theory-building quite challenging. Yet, as this case study of tree theft shows, it is precisely because environment-society relationships are so intertwined that a “symmetrical” treatment of humans and nonhuman actors is required that takes us well beyond the bounds of “traditional” political ecology. Locating the treatment of tree theft in just such a social theoretical framework offers many benefits. Staddon contends that it is not possible to really understand, or develop policy for, tree theft without carefully considering the relational networks that bind together all the protagonists, including loggers, foresters, policy-makers, and local people, as well as trees, forests, road networks, and other nonhuman agents.

Type
Nature, Culture, and Power
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. 2009

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31. Cited in Murdoch, “Inhuman/Nonhuman/Human,” 740.

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37. Also see Staddon, “Restructuring the Bulgarian Wood Processing Sector.”

38. Ibid.

39. Equivalent to one-half cubic meter of firewood for every man, woman, and child in the United Kingdom!

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46. See also Staddon, “Localities, Natural Resources and Transition in Eastern Europe”; Staddon, “Restructuring the Bulgarian Wood Processing Sector”; and Staddon, “Towards a Critical Political Ecology.”

47. Cellarius, “Seeing the Forest for the Trees”; and Staddon, “Restitution of Forest Property in Post-Communist Bulgaria.”

48. Cellarius, In the Land of Orpheus; and Mieke Meurs and Robert Begg, “Path Dependence in Bulgarian Agriculture,” in Pickles and Smith, eds., Theorising Transition, 243-61.

49. The plans and the planning process became, in Latour's terms, the “obligatory passage point” in the negotiation of the relations between the community of humans and nonhumans.

50. Staddon, “Restitution of Forest Property in Post-Communist Bulgaria.” This contrasts sharply with the much enlarged conception of private ownership and control inherent in Polish forestry restructuring legislation enacted in 1991 and 1992. See S. Wypych, “A Few Aspects of Private Forest Management in die Area of the Regional Directorate of the State Forests (RDSF) Katowice,” in Helmut Brandl and T. Olischläger, ed., Private Forstwirtschaft: Chancen und Herausforderungen für die mittel- und osteuropäischen Lander (Freiburg im Breisgau, 1995), 269-82. However, as Wypych himself notes, in the Polish case this maximalism resulted in a situation by 1994-1995 where private woodlots were measurably inferior to their state-owned counterparts. Others have suggested that this tenure structure may have contributed to the severity of the 1997 floods in southwestern Poland. Consequently the Polish statutes have, since 1995, been thoroughly revised to more carefully restrict and circumscribe the legal meaning of private ownership.

51. The common property resources literature is enormous and cannot be discussed adequately here. Suffice it to say here that I am using the term common property in a general sense and not in the technical/institutional sense developed by Elinor Ostrom and others. For a specific application of common property resources models to forestry, see Lars Carlsson, “Management, Resilience and the Strategy of the Commons” (paper presented at the Eighth Biennial Conference of the International Association of the Study of Common Property, Bloomington, Indiana, 31 May-3June 2000).

52. Pendleton, “Taking the Forest”; and Muth and Bowe, “Illegal Harvest of Renewable Natural Resources in North America.”

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54. The temptation to cut extra trees is in part driven by prices of up to several hundred pounds per high quality log.

55. Bouriaud, “Causes of Illegal Logging.“

56. Kostov, Paligorov, Petrov, and Bogdanov, “Illegal Logging in Bulgaria.“

57. Staddon, Interview no. 18, Dobrinishte, July 2001.

58. Scott, Seeing Like a State.

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60. Staddon, “Restructuring the Bulgarian Wood Processing Sector.”

61. Staddon, “Localities, Natural Resources and Transition in Eastern Europe”; Staddon, “Restitution of Forest Property in Post-Communist Bulgaria.”

62. Fonseca, Isabel, Bury Me Standing: The Gypsies and Their Journey (New York, 1996)Google Scholar; and Bouriaud, “Causes of Illegal Logging.”

63. It may be that some, particularly foresters or other state officials, prefer to ignore them since they are not prepared to “do anything” about these encampments. For others it is more apparent that local Roma are rendered “invisible” by the deep-rooted cultural prejudice against them. Also see Fonseca, Bury Me Standing; Staddon, “Restructuring the Bulgarian Wood Processing Sector.”

64. Cf. Fonseca, Burying Me Standing.

65. Muth and Bowe, “Illegal Harvest of Renewable Natural Resources in North America”; Pendleton, “Taking the Forest.”

66. Other legislation, which there is not space here to discuss, has also contributed, including conservation and heritage preservation legislation.

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68. Most countries now maintain so-called Red Books, which are registers of endangered or threatened flora and fauna.

69. Lorimer, Jamie, “Nonhuman Charisma,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 25, no. 5 (2007): 911-32CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

70. Bulgaria is adopting the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) standard as a matter of central policy, although to date only one forest district has been certified.

71. Tom Burditt, “Field Working: Exploring Knowledge Networks in the Practice of Nature Conservation” (PhD diss., University of the West of England, Bristol, 2008); and Staddon and Cellarius, “Paradoxes of Conservation and Development in Postsocialist Bulgaria.”

72. Cf. Callon, “Some Elements of a Sociology of Translation.”

73. Cf. Staddon and Cellarius, “Paradoxes of Conservation and Development in Postsocialist Bulgaria.”

74. Woolgar, “Configuring the User.” See also Demeritt, “Science, Social Constructivism and Nature.”

75. Cf. Scott, Seeing Like a State.

76. In Latour's terms: Latour, Pandora's Hope.

77. Latour, Pandora's Hope.

78. Murdoch, “Inhuman/Nonhuman/Human.“

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