Skip to main content
University of California Press

About the Book

Global conservation efforts are celebrated for saving Guatemala’s Maya Forest. This book reveals that the process of protecting lands has been one of racialized dispossession for the Indigenous peoples who live there. Through careful ethnography and archival research, Megan Ybarra shows how conservation efforts have turned Q’eqchi’ Mayas into immigrants on their own land, and how this is part of a larger national effort to make Indigenous peoples into neoliberal citizens. Even as Q’eqchi’s participate in conservation, Green Wars amplifies their call for material decolonization by recognizing the relationship between Indigenous peoples and the land itself.

About the Author

Megan Ybarra is Assistant Professor of Geography at the University of Washington.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Introduction: Conservation and Settler Logics of Elimination 1
1. Making the Maya Forest 29
2. We Didn’t Invade the Park, the Park Invaded Us 54
3. Rethinking Ladinos as Settlers 82
4. Taxing the Kaxlan: Q’eqchi’ Self-Determination within and beyond the Settler State 107
5. Narco-Narratives and Twenty-First-Century Green Wars 136
Conclusion: Decolonizing the Maya Forest, and Beyond 155

Notes 165
Glossary of Terms and Acronyms 177
References 181

Reviews

“Bold, raw, and discomforting, Green Wars plainly documents contradictions, expulsions, and abject violence in the Maya Forest. Indigenous communities, for whom peace in Guatemala never came, have been rendered illegal and criminal through acts of conservation and narco-control. To make real change, we will need to pass through the truthful darkness at the heart of Megan Ybarra’s account.”—Paul Robbins, author of Political Ecology: A Critical Introduction

Green Wars is a theoretically rich and sophisticated analysis of conservation politics in Guatemala that advances significantly our current understanding of such conflicts. Drawing on indigenous studies, feminist political ecology, and postcolonial and critical race theory, Megan Ybarra illuminates the hemispheric dynamics that created Mayan dispossession, how the Maya are typically misread, and how we might begin to forge a new future. A must-read!”—Laura Pulido, author of Black, Brown, Yellow, and Left: Radical Activism in Los Angeles 

Awards

  • Outstanding Publication in Cultural and Political Ecology 2019, Association of American Geographers