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HAROLD CHILINGWORTH Winner of the
1997 Robert McC. Netting Award Harold Brookfield is a
magnificent loner whose writings strike at the very heart of the discipline
of geography. They are concerned with matters of common sense, of ordinary
people and of reality. Their roots run deep. For those with a soft spot for
geographical memorabilia, for the discipline's much cherished classics, his
name first surfaces almost half a century ago in the Indian Geographical Society
Silver Jubilee Souvenir and N. Subrahmanyam Memorial Volume, Like so many of his kindred
spirits, Harold's professional and personal life is an itinerary where
experience continually nourishes the intellect: his discovery of western Henceforth Harold was to
dedicate himself to the study of rural societies in the Third World and, more
specifically, to the dynamic relationships between land and people, all
considered through that singular window of local study. Only the geographical
focus has changed through time. First it was the New Guinea Highlands,
followed, in the mid-'60s, by a broadening of interests to all of The wealth of scholarship that
this itinerary has generated is quite remarkable: Struggle for Land
(with Paula Brown, 1963); Melanesia: A Geographical Interpretation of an
Island World (with Doreen Hart, 1971); Colonialism, Development and
Independence: The Case of the Melanesian Islands in the South Pacific
(1972); The Pacific in Transition (edited collection, 1973); Interdependent
Development (1975); Population, Resources and Development in the
Eastern Islands of Fiji (with R.D. Bedford et al., 1977); Land
Degradation and Society (with Piers Blaikie, 1987); Islands, Islanders
and the World: the Colonial and Post-colonial Experience of Eastern Fiji
(with T.P. Bayliss-Smith et al., 1988); The City in the Village: the in
situ Urbanisation of Villages, Villagers and their Land around Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
(with A. Samad Hadi et al., 1991); South-East Asiaís Environmental Future:
the Search for Sustainability (edited collection with Y. Byron, 1993); Transformation
with Industrialization in Peninsular Malaysia (edited collection, 1994); In
Place of the Forest: Environmental and Social Transformation in Borneo and
the eastern Malay Peninsula (with L. Potter et al., 1995), and so forth.
And those are only some of the books! Harold has always been a source
of intellectual inspiration, to what are now at least two if not three
generations of students and colleagues living on several continents. He was
the architect of what Marvin Mikesell once called "the In his contribution to
academic scholarship Harold Brookfield has successfully negotiated a number
of "revolutions" and maintained a healthy distance with respect to
them all. The only one which almost seduced him was the quantitative
revolution which "led him away from the truth" and resulted in his
writing what he now believes to be a largely nonsense contribution to his
collection The Pacific in Transition. What was it that has kept him
on course and made his work so important to us all in cultural ecology and,
indeed elsewhere in and beyond geography? Perhaps, in the final analysis, it
is Harold's fundamental sanity, a sanity which is grounded in the real world that
lies beyond academia. This is expressed in his commitment to fieldwork - and
the sincere regret that the last time he was able to do any was in This is scholarship which is
constructed out of the virtues of sanity and common sense. Harold is now well past his
70th birthday but he is as busy as ever. His office is just down the corridor
from the Department of Human Geography at the Harold Brookfield is a
magnificent outsider and cultural ecology is much the richer for it.
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Page last updated October
6, 2005 |
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