Playing with Fire: Using Forum Theatre to Research Social Conflict in the Aftermath of 2019 Bolivian Wildland Fires

Lead Research Organisation: Newcastle University
Department Name: Sch of Geog, Politics and Sociology

Abstract

In 2019, Brazil experienced more than 72,000 wildland fires, which represents a staggering 84 percent increase from the previous year. The burning of the Brazilian Amazon continues to be the subject of much international attention. Less visible, however, has been an equivalent environmental crisis unfolding in neighbouring countries in South America. In 2019, for example, NASA estimated that Bolivia had a burned area similar in size to Brazil, but in a country eight times smaller. The total burned area was over 5 million hectares, five times greater than the previous year and the largest area burned over the past 20 years. Wildland fires are having devastating socio-economic and environmental implications in rural Bolivia. The Chiquitania region, an area in the Eastern part of the country that hosts one of the largest and better preserved dry forests in South America, has been particularly affected by the recent fires. Here, the exceptional devastation of recent fires, especially on protected areas and indigenous territories, have exacerbated tensions among local communities (indigenous peoples, migrant peasants, ranchers, Mennonites) with different ways of living and using the land and natural resources.

This project aims to advance local and international public debate on the complexity and urgency of wildland fire crisis through the creation of research-derived artistic work. We deploy a community theatre approach as a conflict mitigation tool to facilitate critical dialogue within and between different rural communities in Bolivia's Chiquitania region. We draw on a popular community theatre methodology called Theatre of the Oppressed (TO) (Boal 1974) to create a Forum Theatre play with members of different local groups animating their lived experiences of the wildland fire crisis. This play will then travel, to be performed in four fire-affected communities. Forum Theatre is a theatrical form in which spectators (reframed as spect-actors) can physically enter the theatrical 'fiction' to make an intervention that might lead to a different outcome. Our objective is to bring people from different social groups into (potentially tense) dialogue and to create an uneasy sense of incompleteness that seeks resolution through real action off stage.

This project will document for the first time the application of TO methods to a wildland fire crisis. It will focus on complex situations of oppression stemming from inter-community conflicts involving multiple dimensions: cultural and ethnic stigmatisation, incompatible livelihood strategies, political competition, relationships to the natural environment. We will develop an innovative approach to understand the linkages between multiple dimensions of oppression and how these are reflected in a major socio-environmental crisis such as the one provoked by wildland fires.

The research team will follow alongside the travels of the play to record audience interventions and to interview key actors in local communities to glean a fuller understanding of issues and experiences. The creation and performance of the play will be recorded and, drawing on the individual and collective journeys of the project participants, a documentary film and a photography exhibition will be created. Visual arts will become, in this context, powerful means to engage with national and international audiences in order to enhance public awareness and debate on the complexity of wildland fire emergency. A photo and video exhibit will tour several major Bolivian cities, international festivals and academic conferences and will also be available through the project website. These will thus encourage continued reflection on wildland fire crisis beyond the scope and duration of the project.

Planned Impact

Our project proposes a co-production methodology based on the Theatre of the Oppressed (TO) approach, which is unique in its way to generate both research findings and solutions to community problems simultaneously rather than sequentially. This simultaneous production of research and social transformation is in line with the urgency call's mandate, as it ensures results in a very short timeframe that fits the emergency context.

The primary beneficiaries are local communities affected by wildland fires. We aim to make an impact by deescalating ongoing conflicts and prevent future tensions from arising, with positive effects on community wellbeing and quality of life, in the following way: 1) In line with TO pedagogy, we expect FT activities to be reflected in more inclusive and less conflictive community strategies, actions and narratives during the next fire season and electoral cycle; 2) Reports summarising key proposals and actions emerging from the performance and post-performance discussions will work as bases to inspire community agreements and action plans. We expect the reports to strengthen local institutions based on deliberative, inclusive mechanisms of decision-making and to generate more sustainable and collegial strategies for livelihoods and forest conservation; 3) A photo mural exhibition depicting FT scenes displayed on community walls will aim at changing daily interactions during the next dry season by reminding people of previous experiences of dialogue and reconciliation. Community impact will be assessed through follow up fieldwork to identify and capture any changes in local practices, narratives and attitudes.

A project report will be created for Bolivian policymakers based on data from interviews, theatre activities and direct proposals and actions identified by the communities. The report will be disseminated via meetings between the PI, Bolivian Co-Is and civil servants and MPs directly involved in the relevant policy agenda. This contribution will be timely as the new elected government is expected to revise some controversial pieces of legislation on land and forest management approved by the Morales administration in recent years.

Our local NGO partners will directly benefit from the participation in the project via the strengthening of their international profile and partnerships and the participation in training on new cutting-edge methods and transferrable skills based on TO approaches. This will increase the range of actions and tools available for local partners in their daily work to address conflict and foster public dialogue and a culture of peace, increasing their effectiveness.

The UNDP Governance team will support the dissemination of our results and facilitate outreach to other UN agencies in Bolivia, at the UNDP Latin American and global headquarters. The aim will be to enhance UN officers' understanding of fire emergency-related conflicts and offer lessons learned from a conflict mitigation endeavour based on TO methods. This will feed into the UN advisory role to national governments and as international broker of best practices.

The project will be the incubator for the development of new collaborations among a highly multicultural group of practitioners based and from Bolivia, Colombia, Italy, New Zealand and the UK, which will lead to unique artistic outputs, including a FT play, a documentary film and a photo exhibit. The impact of the visual outputs will be through their capacity to convene complex messages in an immediate way that can reach a broader audience of non-experts. By so doing, the aim is to generate awareness on fire emergencies and their complexity in a moment in which these issues have already gathered the lay audience attention as a result of the vast media coverage received by the Amazon fires in recent months.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Title Cenizas 
Description 10-minute documentary film. 
Type Of Art Film/Video/Animation 
Year Produced 2022 
Impact Documentary film circulating and creating audience engagement on our research on wildfires and ecological crisis in Bolivia. 
 
Title Creando historias de fuego 
Description 15-minute documentary film. 
Type Of Art Film/Video/Animation 
Year Produced 2022 
Impact Documentary film circulating and creating audience engagement on our research on wildfires and ecological crisis in Bolivia. 
 
Title Después de un incendio 
Description 26 minute documentary film. 
Type Of Art Film/Video/Animation 
Year Produced 2022 
Impact Documentary film circulating and creating audience engagement on our research on wildfires and ecological crisis in Bolivia. 
 
Title Obras de Teatro 
Description 66-minute documentary film 
Type Of Art Film/Video/Animation 
Year Produced 2022 
Impact Documentary film circulating and creating audience engagement on our research on wildfires and ecological crisis in Bolivia. 
 
Title Playing with Wildfire Photography and Video Exhibition 
Description This is a touring multi-media exhibition curated around 32 photographs and 3 show films. In 2022, the exhibition was featured at the annual conference of the Royal Geographical Society, as well as the UKRI Festival of Social Science at Creative Stirling. In March 2023, the exhibition toured to the main gallery space of the Royal Geographical Society in London. 
Type Of Art Artistic/Creative Exhibition 
Year Produced 2022 
Impact Assisting to raise awareness of the effects of ecological crisis and wildfire in the lives of those most affected in Bolivia's Chiquitania. 
 
Title Retratos de Fuego 
Description 5-minute documentary film. 
Type Of Art Film/Video/Animation 
Year Produced 2022 
Impact Short documentary film circulating and creating audience engagement on our research on wildfires and ecological crisis in Bolivia. 
 
Description Preliminary findings based on empirical data collected during fieldwork are shaping novel contributions to the understanding of the politicization of wildfires in unstable political contexts as well as in intercommunal conflict dynamics linked to socio-ecological crisis. Wildfires are impactful natural events dramatically shaped by human action and climate change. For wildfires' very nature and the difficulty of establishing their exact geographical origin and causes, narratives around fire can be relatively easily manipulated to serve political goals. In the case of Bolivia, we observed how for example the blaming of a specific group (internal migrants) for being responsible of devastating wildfires is widely used in the political discourse with little empirical evidence. This is contributing to a rise in social tensions and fuelling intercommunal conflict. It is also strengthening social and ethnic stigmatization among communities of the rural poor. The role of wildfires in politics has been seldom explored in the literature and we aim to use these findings both to provide valuable empirical evidence of how wildfires play a role in politics as well as to develop a broader research agenda around this topic.

Our work has also produced engaging methodological insights on how to use participatory theatre methods to conduct social science research and to work with marginal communities experiencing conflict and social tensions. We have preliminary identified two key methodological contributions:

1. Forum Theatre (FT) for 'reconciliation' or what are the resources and challenges of using FT in situations of social conflict, and particularly socio-ecological conflict. We are not looking at 'standard' oppression nor at violent conflict/post-conflict but at low intensity but highly polarizing social conflict as a result of socio-ecological crises linked to wildfire. We have identified advantages and possible methodological strategies we put in place as well as some reflections on the challenges and limits of this approach.
2. The 'oppression gap' as a dilemma for Theatre of the Oppressed practitioners and researchers. What happens when local perceptions/explanations of participants are clearly informed by 'problematic' assumptions and stereotypes, such as collective narratives of discrimination and stigmatization arguably informed/manipulated/created by political agendas? How do we deal with stories where oppression is rooted in this kind of narratives (of oppressed blaming other oppressed groups)? And, related to this, how do we deal with the fact that macro-dynamics (economic, political, climatic) which are evident to the researcher/facilitator are in fact absent or marginal in people's stories? We offer some reflections around these questions which challenges the core of the Marxist ontology of ToO as a theory of social change. In the new highly polarized and social media entrenched scenario political alliances ultimately seem crucial to determine the attribution of oppression, rather than other sources such as life experience or data evidence.
Many individual stories and experiences were shared with us in the making and public performance of this theatrical work in Bolivia. These experiences have been the core of creative intervention outputs and speak directly to the production and reproduction of engendered precarity in the wake of wildfire. Travelling alongside the FT play, we learned about the conditions felt by people and particularly many women caught up in wildfire emergencies in the Chiquitania and beyond - emergencies that are having a particularly devastating impact on already precarious rural livelihoods. They illustrate the critical lack of institutional support and state accountability.
Exploitation Route Outcomes can be taken forward and used by others through publication and public engagement activities.
Sectors Environment,Government, Democracy and Justice,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

 
Description As part of the impact activities of this research, in August 2022, we (Fontana, Johnston, Cole) curated a photography exhibition documenting the Playing with Wildfires project - the full exhibition is formed by 32 images and 3 video panels. We are also finalizing the production of a 30 min creative documentary film, which in combination provide an opportunity to spark public awareness and discussion on issues of climate change, ecological crisis, and their links to endemic poverty and social marginalisation. The exhibition has already had some success in this regard; a truncated version was featured at the 2022 annual meeting of the Royal Geographical Society (Newcastle); at the 2022 Festival of Social Science in Scotland (Creative Stirling) and received two weeks of exhibition at the main gallery space at the offices of the Royal Geographical Society in London. Further dates in Glasgow and Milan are being scheduled for 2023. The documentary film is currently being considered by film festivals, distributors and broadcasters in Europe and Latin America. We were recently awarded additional funding by Newcastle University (£17,700) and the University of Glasgow (£20,000) to implement new project engagement and outreach activities, namely, to support two weeks of exhibition in Santa Cruz, Bolivia, and two weeks of exhibition in the RGS exhibition space in London and Milan. These are opportunities to organize two events targeting different audiences, one UK-focused and one engaging with EU stakeholders, international organizations and businesses in one of the European countries most affected by wildfires. Relying on visual arts outputs as a way of distilling key research findings for a lay audience, the aim will be to enhance stakeholders' and the general public's understanding of wildfire crises as complex socio-ecological phenomena, challenging a widespread narrow public understanding of wildfires exclusively as 'risks' and 'natural disasters'. We are also using some of these funds to increase the accessibility of the creative documentary film and exhibition video through captioning and audio description. Findings have also been used and disseminated in two published journal articles and will form the basis of two additional publications in 2023.
First Year Of Impact 2021
Sector Environment,Government, Democracy and Justice,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections
Impact Types Cultural,Societal

 
Description ERC Starting Grant
Amount € 1,500,000 (EUR)
Organisation European Research Council (ERC) 
Sector Public
Country Belgium
Start 05/2023 
End 04/2028
 
Description Glasgow Knowledge Exchange Fund
Amount £20,205 (GBP)
Organisation University of Glasgow 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2023 
End 07/2023
 
Description UKRI GCRF and Newton Fund Consolidation Account
Amount £17,700 (GBP)
Organisation United Kingdom Research and Innovation 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2022 
End 07/2023
 
Description Institutional partnership 
Organisation Royal Geographical Society
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution Members of research team initiated the partnership and organised engagement activity.
Collaborator Contribution RGS hosted our photography exhibition at their annual conference in August 2022, in Newcastle, and in March 2023, we brought this exhibition to the RGS's main exhibition space in London for two weeks of public exhibition. The RGS is assisting with promoting the activity. Alongside the exhibition, we organised a public panel with experts discussing the issues of wildfires.
Impact The partnership is contributing to the tour of the research team's multi-media exhibition and curated public events.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Institutional partnership 
Organisation University of Glasgow
Department School of Social and Political Sciences Glasgow
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Members of the research team have collaborated to establish this institutional partnership.
Collaborator Contribution University of Glasgow has provided 20205 in funding to support outreach and engagement activities.
Impact This remails ongoing. The outcome of this collaboration is a multi-media (video and photography) and multi-disciplinary (geography, politics, fine arts) exhibition.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Multi-Media Exhibition 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact This was a multi-media exhibition (photographs and film) designed to communicate and engage audiences in our research on the impact of wildfires and ecological crisis in Bolivia. Presented at Creative Stirling as part of the UK National Festival of Social Science, 17 October - 13 November 2022. Attended by 650 people.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Multi-Media Exhibition 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact This was a multi-media exhibition (photographs and film) designed to communicate and engage audiences in our research on the impact of wildfires and ecological crisis in Bolivia. Presented at the annual conference of the Royal Geographical Society in Newcastle, 25 August - 2 September 2022. The exhibition was accessible to approximately 2,000 geographers from around the world.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Public Performances 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact This activity involved the public performances of our Forum Theatre plays created and performed by people living the effects of wildfires in Bolivia. This work engaged 880 people in 14 performances across different communities (migrant, indigenous, campesino) experiencing the fallout of wildfires and ecological emergency in rural Bolivia.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://playingwithwildfire.org/forum-theatre/