La incorporación de la Hacienda “El Murciélago” en el territorio del Parque Nacional Santa Rosa: Un proyecto geopolítico (1978-1986)
Loading...
Date
Authors
Díaz Bolaños, Ronald Eduardo
Madriz Sojo, Gabriel
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
El presente trabajo visibiliza el territorio del Sector Murciélago del Parque
Nacional Santa Rosa. No solamente como una zona protegida con remanentes de
bosque tropical seco y especialmente relevante por su resguardo de los ecosistemas
del Pacífico Seco costarricense, sino también como un espacio de poder que,
condicionado por su situación limítrofe con Nicaragua y el contexto geopolítico
centroamericano e internacional, esta zona vio reconfiguradas sus prácticas humanas
desarrolladas durante el período de estudio. Lo anterior debido a cambiantes
disposiciones de las élites políticas nacionales: desde una inicial tendencia
conservacionista con la expropiación hacendaria durante la administración Carazo
Odio (1978-1982) a una intensificación militar y transgresión ambiental durante
la administración Monge Álvarez (1982-1986) y continuada, pero gradualmente
dirimida, durante el primer año de la administración Arias Sánchez (1986-
1990). A través de un análisis documental de fuentes de archivo, hemerográficas,
secundarias y mapas, el artículo desarrolla un recorrido histórico de los principales
procesos de aprovechamiento, uso y redistribución territorial del espacio señalado,
contribuyendo a la desmitificación de discursos oficiales respeto a los proyectos
de conservación del Estado costarricense. Finalmente, esta concluye que la
estricta aplicación de las políticas de conservación dentro de la zona estudiada
se vio constreñida por una variable agenda política de seguridad nacional, una
canalización de demandas de grupos sociales, inconstantes flujos presupuestarios
debido a la crisis económica de inicios de la década de 1980 y una denotada desidia
institucional en la gestión del parque.
This paper approaches the emergence of Murciélago’s area from Santa Rosa National Park not only as a protected area with remnants of the dry tropical forest (especially relevant due to its conservation of Costa Rica’s north pacific regional ecosystems), but also as a power space, conditioned by its border location with Nicaragua and Central American and international geopolitical contexts. This zone experienced several reconfigurations of social practices developed during the temporal scale of study. This reconfigurations were due to the changing elite policies: from an incipient conservationist tendency initiated by Hacienda “El Murciélago” expropriation during president Carazo Odio’s administration (1978- 1982), to a military intensification and environmental transgression during Monge Álvarez’s administration (1982-1986), and continued but gradually diminished at the first year of Arias Sánchez’s administration (1986-1990). Through an analysis of archival, hemerographic, secondary sources, and maps, the paper develops a historical journey through the main processes of land use, territory exploitation, and distribution occurred in the mentioned space, contributing to the demystification of official speeches regarding conservation projects held by the Costa Rican State. Finally, the paper concludes that the strict implementation of binding conservationist policies inside Murcielago’s sector have been limited by a variety of political agendas in national security, a channeling of demands from various social sectors due to the economic crisis of the early 1980’s, and a marked institutional negligence in the park management.
This paper approaches the emergence of Murciélago’s area from Santa Rosa National Park not only as a protected area with remnants of the dry tropical forest (especially relevant due to its conservation of Costa Rica’s north pacific regional ecosystems), but also as a power space, conditioned by its border location with Nicaragua and Central American and international geopolitical contexts. This zone experienced several reconfigurations of social practices developed during the temporal scale of study. This reconfigurations were due to the changing elite policies: from an incipient conservationist tendency initiated by Hacienda “El Murciélago” expropriation during president Carazo Odio’s administration (1978- 1982), to a military intensification and environmental transgression during Monge Álvarez’s administration (1982-1986), and continued but gradually diminished at the first year of Arias Sánchez’s administration (1986-1990). Through an analysis of archival, hemerographic, secondary sources, and maps, the paper develops a historical journey through the main processes of land use, territory exploitation, and distribution occurred in the mentioned space, contributing to the demystification of official speeches regarding conservation projects held by the Costa Rican State. Finally, the paper concludes that the strict implementation of binding conservationist policies inside Murcielago’s sector have been limited by a variety of political agendas in national security, a channeling of demands from various social sectors due to the economic crisis of the early 1980’s, and a marked institutional negligence in the park management.
Description
Keywords
Conservación ambiental, Historia contemporánea, Geopolítica, Parque nacional, Política y gobierno, Environmental conservation, Contemporary history, Geopolitics, National parks, Politics and government
Citation
https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/dialogos/article/view/40677