Crafting Wounaan Landscapes: Identity, Art, and Environmental Governance in Panama's Darién. By Julie Velásquez Runk. 2017. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, AZ. 313 pp.


 

French. 2021. Ethnobiology Letters 12(1):19–20  19 

Reviews 

America, culminating in the creation of the Panama 
Canal many years later. It is this political and social 
climate of military action, trade, and cultural mixing, 
that forms the backdrop to Velásquez Runk’s study. 

Chapter 3 focuses on indigenous cosmologies/
ontologies, which revolve around local riverways, 
which are used for social exchanges, trade, and are the 
home to local spirits. Images of riverine wildlife 
decorate local basketry and carvings, reinforcing the 
importance of these landscapes. In Wounaan culture, 
landscapes are marked by their own topography of 
spirits: they inhabit different ecosystems but also 
organic and inorganic objects, and can affect those 
who come in contact with them both negatively and 
positively. The result of this worldview is a charged 
landscape. Where outsiders might view an empty, 
silent forest, the Wounaan view the same space as 
teeming with spirits. 

Chapters 4 and 5 focus on forest use and craft 
traditions. Many indigenous carvings are made of 
Cocobolo (Dalbergia sp.), a tropical rosewood that 
produces heavy, hard wood in multiple colors. 
Artisans primarily use roots and branches from fallen 
trees, preserving the living forests where possible. In 
the past artisans mostly created domestic objects (e.g., 
tools and utensils) but have shifted to pieces that 
might appeal to tourists (e.g., animal sculptures) in 
recent years. The Wounaan are also known for their 

How does the environment shape cultural identity 
and how can this knowledge be used to inform 
conservation activities? Julie Velásquez Runk takes us 
on a unique journey to Panama’s Darién, weaving 
together anthropology, history, and ecology to 
understand the central role of landscape to the 
Wounaan people and to argue for a more culturally 
conscious form of biodiversity management. The 
Wounaan people live along the Chucunaque, Sambú, 
and Tuira Rivers; their livelihoods are based on a mix 
of subsistence fishing, swidden agriculture, and crafts 
(mainly baskets and tagua figurines) made from forest 
products. Velásquez Runk has a unique expertise on 
the area; she previously conducted conservation work 
in the region (1996–2001) followed by two stints of 
ethnographic fieldwork (2001–2005 and 2006–2016). 
This experience of both the land and people make her 
an expert on the subject and lends nuance to her calls 
to shift conservation practices in the region. 

Chapters 1 and 2 provide historical and 
geographic background to the region. Archaeological 
evidence suggests that indigenous people have 
occupied the area for at least 3,800 years, cultivating 
maize (Zea mays) and practicing swidden agriculture, 
until subsequent occupation by the Spanish 350 years 
ago changed the region. Population levels declined 
and the Panama Canal region became a hotspot for 
international trade in gold and minerals from South 

Crafting Wounaan Landscapes: Identity, Art, and Environmental 
Governance in Panama's Darién. By Julie Velásquez Runk. 2017. 
University of Arizona Press, Tucson, AZ. 313 pp.  

Editor's Note: This book has also just been published in Spanish, by Bogotá's Instituto Colombiana de Antropología e Historia 
with the title: Los wounaan y la construcción de su paisaje: Identidad, arte y gobernanza ambiental en la frontera Panamá -
Colombia. 2020.   

Katherine E. French
1*

 

1
Department of Plant and Microbial Biology Koshland Hall, Berkeley, USA. 

*
katharine.e.french@gmail.com  

Received August 23, 2020 OPEN ACCESS 
Accepted September 11, 2020 DOI 10.14237/ebl.12.1.2021.1727 
Published February 1, 2021 

Copyright © 2021 by the author(s); licensee Society of Ethnobiology. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons 
Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International Public License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0), which permits non-commercial use, distribution, 
and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. 

 



 

French. 2021. Ethnobiology Letters 12(1):19–20  20 

Reviews 

basketry, which are made from the fibers of the chunga 
or black palm (Astrocaryum standleyanum). These goods 
are an important source of income where informal 
wage labor is scarce. Wounaan young men also collect 
the seeds from the tagua palm to produce carvings of 
local wildlife (e.g., hummingbirds) for tourists. Finally, 
Chapter 6 delves into scientific paradigms and 
political motivations driving conservation activities in 
the region and how indigenous communities have 
used international conservation paradigms like 
REDD+ (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation 
and Forest Degradation) to express their agency in 
managing and using their local landscape/natural 
resources. The text is rich in Wounaan language and 
contains a glossary of terms at the end of the book. 
Numerous black and white photos of the landscape 
and inhabitants complement the text and give the 
reader a sense of place. 

Velásquez Runk’s book touches upon a topic not 
usually covered in conservation: the role of 
indigenous ontologies in setting conservation 
priorities and managing landscapes with both local 
and global importance. The anthropological study of 
ontology focuses on how world views are constructed, 
expressed and passed on from generation to 
generation. In the case of the Wounaan, myths about 
the surrounding forests and rivers shape their 
ontologies of life, health and community and 
permeate their art. How they conceive, value, and 
engage with the natural world is intimately connected 
to these beliefs. Velásquez Runk notes that 
conservation objectives are often driven by scientific 
goals (preserving biodiversity) or political agendas 
(controlling access to land/resources). This process 
has the potential to disenfranchise the people who 
inhabit these landscapes; it also threatens their 
identity, culture, and livelihoods. Velásquez Runk 
demonstrates that integrating indigenous ontologies 
can help direct which resources are protected and 
how in a manner that benefits local communities as 

well as conservationists. This echoes the work of 
other anthropologists who note integrating ontology 
into conservation can strengthen local adoption of 
and active participation in conservation polices 
(Fernández‐Llamazares and Cabeza 2018; Schroeder 
and González 2019), develop more nuanced 
conservation programs based on local ecological 
knowledge (Rist and Dahdouh-Guebas 2006), and 
promote indigenous decision‐making authority and 
self‐governance while decolonizing environmental 
management (Muller et al. 2019). 

Overall, this book would appeal to those 

interested in Central and South American 

ethnobiology and new ways of conducting 

conservation. 

References Cited 
Fernández‐Llamazares, Á., and M. Cabeza. 2018. 

Rediscovering the Potential of Indigenous 

Storytelling for Conservation Practice. Conservation 

Letters 11:e12398. DOI:10.1111/conl.12398. 

Muller, S., S. Hemming, and D. Rigney. 2019. 

Indigenous Sovereignties: Relational Ontologies and 

Environmental Management. Geographical Research 

57:399–410. DOI:10.1111/1745-5871.12362. 

Rist, S., and F. Dahdouh-Guebas. 2006. Ethnoscienc-

es––A Step Towards the Integration of Scientific 

and Indigenous Forms of Knowledge in the 

Management of Natural Resources for the Future. 

Environment, Development and Sustainability 8:467–493. 

DOI:10.1007/s10668-006-9050-7. 

Schroeder, H., and N. C. González. 2019. Bridging 

Knowledge  Divides:  The  Case  of  Indigenous 

Ontologies  of  Territoriality  and  REDD+.  Forest 

Policy  and  Economics  100:198–206.  DOI:10.1016/

j.forpol.2018.12.010.