In this comparative environmental history, we examine the divergent
trajectories of Colombia’s coastal forests since the mid-19th century. In the
Pacific lowlands, natural resource extraction by a black peasantry altered the
forested landscape but did not transform it completely. Left by the white,
merchant elite in charge of the extractive process, this post-emancipation
society maintained their territorial independence and avoided significant
internal differentiation. Racial divisions, however, signaled the continuation
of disparities that had their origin in slavery and colonialism. In the
Caribbean, by contrast, the expansion of cattle ranching better integrated the
region into the nation, but at the expense of extensive deforestation and the
marginalization of what had been its relatively independent peasantry. By
paying attention to the ecological and social basis of landscape appropriation
and change, we suggest that environmental history can help us better
understand the production of inequality in Latin America