Essential agriculture, sacrificial labor, and the COVID-19 pandemic in the US South

IF 2.9 2区 经济学 Q2 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES Journal of Agrarian Change Pub Date : 2022-10-24 DOI:10.1111/joac.12522
Caroline Keegan
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

As farmworkers were reframed as “essential” workers during the COVID-19 pandemic, US growers demanded unfettered access to foreign farm labor. After initially announcing a freeze on all immigration processing, the Trump administration bowed to farmers' demands, granting a single exception for agricultural guestworkers under the H-2A visa program. Through a focus on H-2A farmworkers in Georgia, this paper highlights how the pandemic exacerbated farm labor conditions in the US South. The author interrogates these conditions through the lens of racial capitalism, exposing the legacies of plantation political economies and a longstanding agricultural labor system premised on devaluing racialized labor. These histories are obscured by the myth of agricultural exceptionalism—the idea that agriculture is too different and important to be subject to the same rules and regulations as other industries. Agricultural exceptionalism naturalizes the racial capitalist system and informs state responses that privilege agricultural production through the exploitation of farmworkers, remaking “essential” farmworkers as sacrificial labor.

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基本农业,牺牲劳动,以及美国南部的COVID-19大流行
由于农场工人在新冠肺炎大流行期间被重新定义为“必要”工人,美国种植者要求不受限制地获得外国农场劳动力。特朗普政府最初宣布冻结所有移民程序,后来屈服于农民的要求,对H-2A签证项目下的农业客工给予了一个例外。通过对佐治亚州H-2A农场工人的关注,本文强调了疫情如何加剧了美国南部农场的劳动条件。作者通过种族资本主义的镜头来审视这些状况,揭示了种植园政治经济的遗产和长期存在的以贬低种族化劳动力为前提的农业劳动制度。这些历史被农业例外论的神话所掩盖,这种神话认为农业太不同,太重要,不能像其他行业一样受制于同样的规则和规定。农业例外论使种族资本主义制度自然化,并告知国家的反应,即通过剥削农场工人来为农业生产提供特权,将“必要的”农场工人重新塑造为牺牲劳动力。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
8.00%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: The Journal of Agrarian Change is a journal of agrarian political economy. It promotes investigation of the social relations and dynamics of production, property and power in agrarian formations and their processes of change, both historical and contemporary. It encourages work within a broad interdisciplinary framework, informed by theory, and serves as a forum for serious comparative analysis and scholarly debate. Contributions are welcomed from political economists, historians, anthropologists, sociologists, political scientists, economists, geographers, lawyers, and others committed to the rigorous study and analysis of agrarian structure and change, past and present, in different parts of the world.
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