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Concealed Contradictions: Sustainable Development Goals and Indigenous Land Dispossession in Cambodia Cover

Concealed Contradictions: Sustainable Development Goals and Indigenous Land Dispossession in Cambodia

By: Esther Leemann  
Open Access
|Oct 2025

Abstract

This paper examines how the dual forces of Economic Land Concessions and nature conservation projects in Cambodia converge to dispossess the Indigenous Bunong communities of their forest commons—land held as common property and managed collectively by local institutions, with access determined by matrilineal descent. Drawing on ethnographic research, it argues that the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), rather than transforming entrenched exclusionary practices, function as an institutional epiphenomenon: a discursive layer that enables the Cambodian state to reframe ongoing dispossession in the language of global sustainability while leaving underlying power structures intact. The analysis exposes how state-led land titling processes and overlapping land allocations perpetuate exclusion, masking the gap between the SDGs’ stated aims and the lived realities of the Bunong. The findings call for a critical reassessment of the SDG framework, emphasizing the need to address the political-economic context and the agency of states in selectively mobilizing global agendas to maintain established patterns of Indigenous exclusion.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/ijc.1514 | Journal eISSN: 1875-0281
Language: English
Submitted on: Dec 20, 2024
Accepted on: Jul 8, 2025
Published on: Oct 31, 2025
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2025 Esther Leemann, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.