Sustainable development frictions: lifestyle migration on the coast of Jalisco, Mexico

Jennifer Cardinal

Abstract


Abstract

The concept of sustainability is materialized differently in luxury ecotourism development and in locally-directed community development initiatives. I examine the diverse environmental ideologies at play in these two distinct incarnations of "sustainable development" on the southern Jalisco, Mexico coast; first, in La Manzanilla, a community inhabited by a proportionately large population of leisure consumption-driven lifestyle migrants, then to the north, in elite ecotourism enclaves and a community displaced by a wealthy developer. I suggest these divergent development incarnations may be understood by expanding the concept of lifestyle migration to include a broader range of enactments of home, from different class perspectives. Global environmental ideologies and lifestyle migrant capital play a fundamental but not the only role in local sustainable development. I suggest global influences and local initiatives are creating a productive friction, reassembling global environmental knowledge and tourism imaginaries to suit local agendas. While there is no consensus on what sustainable development should look like in La Manzanilla, the intersection of initiatives is producing locally-directed development that contrasts with the erasure of local agendas happening in elite costal developments nearby.

Keywords: sustainable development, friction, environmental ideology, tourism, lifestyle migration


Full Text:

PDF

References


Ahlborg, H. and A.J. Nightingale. 2018. Theorizing power in political ecology: the where of power in resource governance projects. Journal of Political Ecology 25: 381-401.

Alexander, W. 2018. Testing the water, challenging the narratives of sustainable development: student volunteer research promoting public health in rural Panama in the shadow of an "eco-playground." Journal of Political Ecology 25: 64-79.

Austin, T. 2016. The Rise of Cuixmala. Travel and Leisure. Retrieved March 27 2016. http://www.travelandleisure.com/articles/castle-in-the-sand

Banerjee, S. 2017. Long environmentalism: after the listening session. In Monani, S. and J. Adamson (eds.). Ecocriticism and indigenous studies: conversations from Earth to Cosmos. London: Routledge. Pp. 62-81.

Banks, S.P. 2004. Identity narratives by American and Canadian retirees in Mexico. Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology 19(4): 361-381.

Bantman-Masum, E. 2015. Lifestyle transmigration: understanding a hypermobile minority in Mérida, Mexico. Journal of Latin American Geography 14(1): 101-117.

Barclay, E. 2007. The Morelia Declaration: protection of threatened tropical dry forests in Jalisco, Mexico. National Geographic News. Retrieved April 12, 2020. https://tropicalbiology.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/MORELIA_DECLARATION.pdf

Barrantes-Reynolds, M-P. 2011. The expansion of 'real estate tourism' in coastal areas: its behavior and implications. Recreation and Society in Africa, Asia and Latin America 2(1): 50-67.

Bastos, S. 2014. Territorial dispossession and indigenous rearticulation in the Chapala lakeshore. In Janoschka, M. and H. Haas (eds.). Contested spatialities, lifestyle migration, and residential tourism. London: Routledge.

Benson, M. and K. O'Reilly. 2009. Migration and the search for a better way of life: a critical exploration of lifestyle migration. The Sociological Review 57(4): 608-625.

Berger, D. and A.G. Wood (eds.). 2010. Holiday in Mexico: critical reflections on tourism and tourist encounters. Durham: Duke University Press.

Bloom, N.D. 2006. To be served and loved: the American sense of place in San Miguel de Allende. In Bloom, N.D. (ed.). Adventures into Mexico: American tourism beyond the border. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield.

Borrero, J., M. Ortiz, V. Titov and C. Synolakis. 1997. Field survey of Mexican tsunami produces new data, unusual photos. Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union 78(8): 85-92.

Bourdieu, P. 1986. The forms of capital. In Richardson J. (ed.). Handbook of theory and research for the sociology of education. Westport: Greenwood.

Bullard, R. 1999. Environmental racism and the environmental justice movement. In Merchant C. (ed.). Ecology: key concepts in critical theory. New York: Humanity Books.

Carrigan, A. 2011. Postcolonial tourism: literature, culture, and environment. London: Routledge.

Chaplin, J. 2016. Mexico's new Costa Alegre hideaways. Travel and Leisure. Accessed May 11, 2016. http://www.travelandleisure.com/articles/mexicos-new-costa-alegre-hideaways

Clancy, M. 2001. Exporting paradise: tourism and development in Mexico. Amsterdam: Pergamon.

Clausen, H.B. 2008. Negotiating membership in a Mexican transnational community: a study of North American immigrants in a Mexican border town. Diálogos Latinamericanos 14: 1-18.

Cohen, S.A., T. Duncan and M. Thulemark. 2015. Lifestyle mobilities: the crossroads of travel, leisure and migration. Mobilities (10)1: 155-172.

Couturier, R., T. McKeough and T. Street-Porter. 2014. Robert Couturier: designing paradises. New York: Rizzoli.

Croucher, S. 2009. The other side of the fence: American migrants in Mexico. Austin: University of Texas Press.

Drillinger, M. 2017. Big changes coming to Costalegre – eventually. https://www.travelweekly.com/Mexico-Travel/Insights/Big-changes-coming-to-Costalegre. Retrieved April 12, 2020.

Escobar, A. 1995. Encountering development: the making and unmaking of the third world. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Escobar, A. 1998. Whose knowledge, whose nature? Biodiversity, conservation, and the political ecology of social movements. Journal of Political Ecology 5: 53-82.

Escobar, A. 2008. Territories of difference: place, movements, life, Redes. Durham: Duke University Press.

Fallon, I. 1991. Billionaire: the life and times of Sir James Goldsmith. Boston: Little, Brown and Company.

Fausset, R. 2013. A line in the sand over opening Mexico's beaches to foreign ownership. Los Angeles Times, October 7.

Figueroa, A. 2015. Costalegre's new airport set to boost jet set destination. Travel Agent Central, March 31, 2015.

Fricker, A. 1998. Measuring up to sustainability. Futures 30(4): 367-375.

Harvey, D. 2005. A brief history of neoliberalism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Harvey, D. 2009. Cosmopolitanism and the geographies of freedom. New York: Columbia University Press.

Hayes, M. 2015a. Moving south: the economic motives and structural context of North America's emigrants in Cuenca, Ecuador. Mobilities 10(2): 267-284.

Hayes, M. 2015b. Introduction: the emerging lifestyle migration industry and geographies of transnationalism, mobility and displacement in Latin America. Journal of Latin American Geography 14(1): 7-18.

Hayes, M. 2015c. Into the universe of the hacienda: lifestyle migration, individualism and social dislocation in Vilacamba, Ecuador. Journal of Latin American Geography 14(1): 80-100.

Hayes, M. and J. Carlson. 2018. Good guests and obnoxious gringos: cosmopolitan ideals amongst North American migrants to Cuenca, Ecuador. American Journal of Cultural Sociology 6(1): 189-211.

Hill, W., J. Byrne and F. de Vasconcellos Pegas. 2016. The ecotourism-extraction nexus and its implications for the long-term sustainability of protected areas: what is being sustained and who decides? Journal of Political Ecology 23: 308-327.

Honey, M. 2006. Treading lightly? Ecotourism's impact on the environment. In N. Haenn and R.R. Wilk (eds.). The environment in anthropology: a reader in ecology, culture, and sustainable living. New York: New York University Press.

Jackiewicz, E.L. and O. Govdyak. 2015. Diversity of lifestyle: a view from Belize. Yearbook of the Association of Pacific Coast Geographers 77: 18-39.

Janoschka, M. 2009. The contested spaces of lifestyle mobilities: regime analysis as a tool to study political claims in Latin American retirement destinations. Die Erde 140(3): 1-20.

Klein, N. 2005. The rise of disaster capitalism. The Nation. April 14.

Krauze, E. 1997. Mexico biography of power: a history of modern Mexico, 1810-1996. New York: Harper-Collins Publishers.

Low, S. 2003. Social sustainability: people, history, values. In J. Teutonico (ed.). Managing change: sustainable approaches to the conservation of the built environment. Los Angeles: Getty Conservation Institute.

Maass, J. M. and P. Balvanera. 2005. Ecosystem services of tropical dry forests: insights from long-term ecological and social research on the Pacific Coast of Mexico. Ecology and Society 10: 1.

McWatters, M.R. 2009. Residential tourism: (de) constructing paradise. Boston: Channel View Publications.

Middleton, W. 2010. The Mexican Riviera. Departures. March 30. http://www.departures.com/letters/features/mexican-riviera Retrieved April 12, 2020.

Morales, O.L. 2010. The US citizen retirement migration to Los Cabos, Mexico: profile and social effects. Recreation and Society in Africa, Asia and Latin America 1(1): 75-92.

Nadasdy, P. 2007. Adaptive co-management and the gospel of resilience. In D. Armitage, F. Berkes and N. Doubleday (eds.). Adaptive co-management: collaboration, learning, and multi-level governance. Vancouver: UBC Press.

Oliver-Smith, A. 2010. Defying displacement: grassroots resistance and the critique of development. Austin: University of Texas Press.

Paulson, S. 2015. Political ecology. In D'Alisa G., F. Demaria and G. Kallis (eds.). Degrowth: a vocabulary for a new era. London: Routledge.

Paulson, S. 2017. Degrowth: culture, power and change. Journal of Political Ecology 24: 425-448.

Peet, R., P. Robbins and M.J. Watts. 2011. Global nature. In Peet R., P. Robbins and M.J. Watts (eds.). Global political ecology. London: Routledge.

Penaloza, S. 2010. Mexico's hedonistic haven. The Globe and Mail, October 1. http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/travel/activities-and-interests/mexicos-hedonistic-haven/article571292/ Accessed March 27, 2016.

Perrottet, T. 2014. Costa Careyes's utopian view. The Wall Street Journal. January 23. http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702303933104579306602420176352 Retrieved April 12, 2020.

Peterson, N.D. 2015. Unequal sustainabilities. Economic Anthropology 2: 264-277.

Preston, J. and S. Dillon. 2004. Opening Mexico: the making of a democracy. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Ramsar Sites Information Service. 2016. Estero La Manzanilla. https://rsis.ramsar.org/ris/1789, and "About" https://rsis.ramsar.org/about.

Riensche, M., A. Castillo, E. García-Frapolli, P. Moreno-Casasola and C. Tello-Díaz .2019. Private over public interests in regional tourism governance: a case study in Costalegre, Mexico. Sustainability 11(6): 1760.

Robbins, T. 1971. Another roadside attraction. New York: Bantam Books.

Sánchez-Azofeifa, G.A., M. Quesada, P. Cuevas-Reyes, A. Castillo and G. Sánchez-Montoya. 2009. Land cover and conservation in the area of influence of the Chamela-Cuixmala Biosphere Reserve, Mexico. Forest and Ecology Management 258: 907-912.

Spalding, A. 2013. Environmental outcomes of lifestyle migration: land cover change and land use transitions in the Bocas del Toro Archipelago in Panama. Journal of Latin American Geography 12(3): 179-202.

Stonich, S. 2008. International tourism and disaster capitalism: the case of Hurricane Mitch in Honduras. In Gunewardena, N. and M. Schuller (eds.). Neoliberal strategies in disaster reconstruction. Lanham: Altamira. Pp. 47-68.

Svarstad, H., T.A. Benjaminsen and R. Overå. 2018. Power theories in political ecology. Journal of Political Ecology 25: 350-363.

Truly, D. 2006. The Lake Chapala Riviera: the evolution of a not so American foreign community. In N.D. Bloom (ed.). Adventures into Mexico: American tourism beyond the border. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield.

Tsing, A. 2005. Friction: an ethnography of global connection. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Tsing, A. 2012. Frictions. In Ritzer, G. (ed.). The Wiley-Blackwell encyclopedia of globalization Vol.2. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. Pp. 707-709.

Van Noorloos, F. 2011. A transnational networked space: tracing residential tourism and its multi-local implications in Costa Rica. International Development and Planning Review 33(4): 430-444.

Vaucher, A. 2005. A Mexican trendsetter. New York Times, March 11.




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2458/v27i1.23215

Copyright (c) 2020 Jennifer Cardinal

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.