Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2018
This article analyzes the restoration of Jordan's UN Dana Biosphere Reserve cottages for ecotourism and home building in the neighboring village of Qadisiyya as competing land projects. Whereas a multimillion-dollar endowment from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) restores Dana's houses as a “heritage” village for a tourist economy, families in Qadisiyya build houses with income from provisional labor to shore up a familial future. Each act of home building articulates a political claim to land. This article argues for attention to the architecture of the environment in the comparison of two, once-related villages. A comparative analysis of Dana and Qadisiyya reveals the competing socio-political objectives of home building for the future of Jordan and the implications of environment in that struggle.
Author's Note: I thank Sarah El Kazaz, Gökçe Günel, Sophia Stamatopoulou-Robbins, Elana Buch, Geoffrey Hughes, Andrew Shryock, the editors of IJMES, and three anonymous reviewers for their generative comments on drafts of this article. I thank Muʿad Al Qawabeah for his research assistance in Tafileh. I thank the American Center of Oriental Research whose CAORC Senior Fellowship supported my 2012 research and Franklin & Marshall College for grants that funded my follow-up ethnography.
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32 Al-Akh Sabah is the name of one of the three major tribes in Qadisiyya, representing 20 percent of the village. It designates geography, but is not used as a surname. I use al-Akh Sabah as a surname here to provide both context for the village and anonymity for individual members of this tribe.
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52 Though the RSCN is a Royal NGO, it receives only about 9 percent of its annual operating budget from the government. Almost half of its annual income derives from ecotourism and the accompanying socio-economic projects of its reserves; Annual Report (Amman, Jordan: Royal Society for the Conservation of Nature, 2011), 30. Under the Wild Jordan socio-economic plan—which features a green café just off of Amman's thriving Rainbow Street where agents of the British empire once made their home and where the British embassy is housed today—each of the reserves specializes in a particular trade, such as the profitable biscuit house at the Ajloun reserve which manufactures tasty “traditional” cookies packaged for sale both at the reserve and at the Wild Jordan center in Amman. USAID identified tourism as Jordan's fastest-growing and most promising economic sector.
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55 Ibid.