@article{fdi:010070510, title = {{T}he transnational hybridisation of {M}ozambican nature}, author = {{D}iallo, {R}.{N}. and {R}odary, {E}stienne}, editor = {}, language = {{ENG}}, abstract = {{T}his article looks at the relations between {M}ozambique and transnational dynamics in nature conservation, and the consequences in terms of identity and practice. {M}ore specifically, it focuses on {M}ozambican nature as a political construct, its evolution over time since the independence of {M}ozambique in 1975, its management during the war and its (re)creation into 'pristine' areas after 1992, which facilitated new forms of inclusion in transnational networks and of disjunction at national level. {W}e argue that the shift from relative isolation to inclusion in transnational networks (both regional - particularly {S}outh {A}frican – and global) brought new ways to deal with nature. {I}n particular, it has radically transformed what was conceived as 'nature' and thus what was worth protecting, managing and controlling.}, keywords = {{MOZAMBIQUE}}, booktitle = {{O}pening-up {M}ozambique : histories of the present}, journal = {{A}frican {S}tudies}, volume = {76}, numero = {2}, pages = {188--204}, year = {2017}, DOI = {10.1080/00020184.2017.1322866}, URL = {https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010070510}, }