Logging in muddy waters: the politics of forest exploitation in Cambodia



Logging in muddy waters: the politics of forest exploitation in Cambodia
Philippe Le Billon, Liu Faculty, UBC
December 1, 2002

Le Billon, P. (2002) “Logging in muddy waters: the politics of forest exploitation in Cambodia? Critical Asian Studies 34(4), 563-586

“Logging in Muddy Waters” analyzes the boom in forest exploitation that characterized the 1990s in Cambodia, focusing on the instrumentalization of disorder and violence as a mode of control of forest access and timber-trading channels. The article examines tensions existing between the aspirations of Cambodians for a better life, the power politics of elites, and the hope of some in the international community for a green and democratic peace. These tensions have produced both an interlocking pattern of “illegal logging” from the highest levels of the state to self-demobilized soldiers and peasants and sustained criticism that was only temporarily resolved through a legalization of the forest sector that benefited large-scale companies to the prejudice of the poor.